A Woman of Thirty, by Honoré de Balzac

I.

EARLY MISTAKES

It was a Sunday morning in the beginning of April 1813, a morning which gave promise of one of those bright days
when Parisians, for the first time in the year, behold dry pavements underfoot and a cloudless sky overhead. It was not
yet noon when a luxurious cabriolet, drawn by two spirited horses, turned out of the Rue de Castiglione into the Rue de
Rivoli, and drew up behind a row of carriages standing before the newly opened barrier half-way down the Terrasse de
Feuillants. The owner of the carriage looked anxious and out of health; the thin hair on his sallow temples, turning
gray already, gave a look of premature age to his face. He flung the reins to a servant who followed on horseback, and
alighted to take in his arms a young girl whose dainty beauty had already attracted the eyes of loungers on the
Terrasse. The little lady, standing upon the carriage step, graciously submitted to be taken by the waist, putting an
arm round the neck of her guide, who set her down upon the pavement without so much as ruffling the trimming of her
green rep dress. No lover would have been so careful. The stranger could only be the father of the young girl, who took
his arm familiarly without a word of thanks, and hurried him into the Garden of the Tuileries.

The old father noted the wondering stare which some of the young men gave the couple, and the sad expression left
his face for a moment. Although he had long since reached the time of life when a man is fain to be content with such
illusory delights as vanity bestows, he began to smile.

“They think you are my wife,” he said in the young lady’s ear, and he held himself erect and walked with slow steps,
which filled his daughter with despair.

He seemed to take up the coquette’s part for her; perhaps of the two, he was the more gratified by the curious
glances directed at those little feet, shod with plum-colored prunella; at the dainty figure outlined by a low-cut
bodice, filled in with an embroidered chemisette, which only partially concealed the girlish throat. Her dress was
lifted by her movements as she walked, giving glimpses higher than the shoes of delicately moulded outlines beneath
open-work silk stockings. More than one of the idlers turned and passed the pair again, to admire or to catch a second
glimpse of the young face, about which the brown tresses played; there was a glow in its white and red, partly
reflected from the rose-colored satin lining of her fashionable bonnet, partly due to the eagerness and impatience
which sparkled in every feature. A mischievous sweetness lighted up the beautiful, almond-shaped dark eyes, bathed in
liquid brightness, shaded by the long lashes and curving arch of eyebrow. Life and youth displayed their treasures in
the petulant face and in the gracious outlines of the bust unspoiled even by the fashion of the day, which brought the
girdle under the breast.

The young lady herself appeared to be insensible to admiration. Her eyes were fixed in a sort of anxiety on the
Palace of the Tuileries, the goal, doubtless, of her petulant promenade. It wanted but fifteen minutes of noon, yet
even at that early hour several women in gala dress were coming away from the Tuileries, not without backward glances
at the gates and pouting looks of discontent, as if they regretted the lateness of the arrival which had cheated them
of a longed-for spectacle. Chance carried a few words let fall by one of these disappointed fair ones to the ears of
the charming stranger, and put her in a more than common uneasiness. The elderly man watched the signs of impatience
and apprehension which flitted across his companion’s pretty face with interest, rather than amusement, in his eyes,
observing her with a close and careful attention, which perhaps could only be prompted by some after-thought in the
depths of a father’s mind.

It was the thirteenth Sunday of the year 1813. In two days’ time Napoleon was to set out upon the disastrous
campaign in which he was to lose first Bessieres, and then Duroc; he was to win the memorable battles of Lutzen and
Bautzen, to see himself treacherously deserted by Austria, Saxony, Bavaria, and Bernadotte, and to dispute the dreadful
field of Leipsic. The magnificent review commanded for that day by the Emperor was to be the last of so many which had
long drawn forth the admiration of Paris and of foreign visitors. For the last time the Old Guard would execute their
scientific military manoeuvres with the pomp and precision which sometimes amazed the Giant himself. Napoleon was
nearly ready for his duel with Europe. It was a sad sentiment which brought a brilliant and curious throng to the
Tuileries. Each mind seemed to foresee the future, perhaps too in every mind another thought was dimly present, how
that in the future, when the heroic age of France should have taken the half-fabulous color with which it is tinged for
us today, men’s imaginations would more than once seek to retrace the picture of the pageant which they were assembled
to behold.

“Do let us go more quickly, father; I can hear the drums,” the young girl said, and in a half-teasing, half-coaxing
manner she urged her companion forward.

“The troops are marching into the Tuileries,” said he.

“Or marching out of it — everybody is coming away,” she answered in childish vexation, which drew a smile from her
father.

“The review only begins at half-past twelve,” he said; he had fallen half behind his impetuous daughter.

It might have been supposed that she meant to hasten their progress by a movement of her right arm, for it swung
like an oar blade through the water. In her impatience she had crushed her handkerchief into a ball in her tiny,
well-gloved fingers. Now and then the old man smiled, but the smiles were succeeded by an anxious look which crossed
his withered face and saddened it. In his love for the fair young girl by his side, he was as fain to exalt the present
moment as to dread the future. “She is happy today; will her happiness last?” he seemed to ask himself, for the old are
somewhat prone to foresee their own sorrows in the future of the young.

Father and daughter reached the peristyle under the tower where the tricolor flag was still waving; but as they
passed under the arch by which people came and went between the Gardens of the Tuileries and the Place du Carrousel,
the sentries on guard called out sternly:

“No admittance this way.”

By standing on tiptoe the young girl contrived to catch a glimpse of a crowd of well-dressed women, thronging either
side of the old marble arcade along which the Emperor was to pass.

“We were too late in starting, father; you can see that quite well.” A little piteous pout revealed the immense
importance which she attached to the sight of this particular review.

“Very well, Julie — let us go away. You dislike a crush.”

“Do let us stay, father. Even here I may catch a glimpse of the Emperor; he might die during this campaign, and then
I should never have seen him.”

Her father shuddered at the selfish speech. There were tears in the girl’s voice; he looked at her, and thought that
he saw tears beneath her lowered eyelids; tears caused not so much by the disappointment as by one of the troubles of
early youth, a secret easily guessed by an old father. Suddenly Julie’s face flushed, and she uttered an exclamation.
Neither her father nor the sentinels understood the meaning of the cry; but an officer within the barrier, who sprang
across the court towards the staircase, heard it, and turned abruptly at the sound. He went to the arcade by the
Gardens of the Tuileries, and recognized the young lady who had been hidden for a moment by the tall bearskin caps of
the grenadiers. He set aside in favor of the pair the order which he himself had given. Then, taking no heed of the
murmurings of the fashionable crowd seated under the arcade, he gently drew the enraptured child towards him.

“I am no longer surprised at her vexation and enthusiasm, if you are in waiting,” the old man said with a
half-mocking, half-serious glance at the officer.

“If you want a good position, M. le Duc,” the young man answered, “we must not spend any time in talking. The
Emperor does not like to be kept waiting, and the Grand Marshal has sent me to announce our readiness.”

As he spoke, he had taken Julie’s arm with a certain air of old acquaintance, and drew her rapidly in the direction
of the Place du Carrousel. Julie was astonished at the sight. An immense crowd was penned up in a narrow space, shut in
between the gray walls of the palace and the limits marked out by chains round the great sanded squares in the midst of
the courtyard of the Tuileries. The cordon of sentries posted to keep a clear passage for the Emperor and his staff had
great difficulty in keeping back the eager humming swarm of human beings.

“Is it going to be a very fine sight?” Julie asked (she was radiant now).

“Pray take care!” cried her guide, and seizing Julie by the waist, he lifted her up with as much vigor as rapidity
and set her down beside a pillar.

But for his prompt action, his gazing kinswoman would have come into collision with the hindquarters of a white
horse which Napoleon’s Mameluke held by the bridle; the animal in its trappings of green velvet and gold stood almost
under the arcade, some ten paces behind the rest of the horses in readiness for the Emperor’s staff.

The young officer placed the father and daughter in front of the crowd in the first space to the right, and
recommended them by a sign to the two veteran grenadiers on either side. Then he went on his way into the palace; a
look of great joy and happiness had succeeded to his horror-struck expression when the horse backed. Julie had given
his hand a mysterious pressure; had she meant to thank him for the little service he had done her, or did she tell him,
“After all, I shall really see you?” She bent her head quite graciously in response to the respectful bow by which the
officer took leave of them before he vanished.

The old man stood a little behind his daughter. He looked grave. He seemed to have left the two young people
together for some purpose of his own, and now he furtively watched the girl, trying to lull her into false security by
appearing to give his whole attention to the magnificent sight in the Place du Carrousel. When Julie’s eyes turned to
her father with the expression of a schoolboy before his master, he answered her glance by a gay, kindly smile, but his
own keen eyes had followed the officer under the arcade, and nothing of all that passed was lost upon him.

“What a grand sight!” said Julie in a low voice, as she pressed her father’s hand; and indeed the pomp and
picturesquesness of the spectacle in the Place du Carrousel drew the same exclamation from thousands upon thousands of
spectators, all agape with wonder. Another array of sightseers, as tightly packed as the ranks behind the old noble and
his daughter, filled the narrow strip of pavement by the railings which crossed the Place du Carrousel from side to
side in a line parallel with the Palace of the Tuileries. The dense living mass, variegated by the colors of the
women’s dresses, traced out a bold line across the centre of the Place du Carrousel, filling in the fourth side of a
vast parallelogram, surrounded on three sides by the Palace of the Tuileries itself. Within the precincts thus railed
off stood the regiments of the Old Guard about to be passed in review, drawn up opposite the Palace in imposing blue
columns, ten ranks in depth. Without and beyond in the Place du Carrousel stood several regiments likewise drawn up in
parallel lines, ready to march in through the arch in the centre; the Triumphal Arch, where the bronze horses of St.
Mark from Venice used to stand in those days. At either end, by the Galeries du Louvre, the regimental bands were
stationed, masked by the Polish Lancers then on duty.

The greater part of the vast graveled space was empty as an arena, ready for the evolutions of those silent masses
disposed with the symmetry of military art. The sunlight blazed back from ten thousand bayonets in thin points of
flame; the breeze ruffled the men’s helmet plumes till they swayed like the crests of forest-trees before a gale. The
mute glittering ranks of veterans were full of bright contrasting colors, thanks to their different uniforms, weapons,
accoutrements, and aiguillettes; and the whole great picture, that miniature battlefield before the combat, was framed
by the majestic towering walls of the Tuileries, which officers and men seemed to rival in their immobility.
Involuntarily the spectator made the comparison between the walls of men and the walls of stone. The spring sunlight,
flooding white masonry reared but yesterday and buildings centuries old, shone full likewise upon thousands of bronzed
faces, each one with its own tale of perils passed, each one gravely expectant of perils to come.

The colonels of the regiments came and went alone before the ranks of heroes; and behind the masses of troops,
checkered with blue and silver and gold and purple, the curious could discern the tricolor pennons on the lances of
some half-a-dozen indefatigable Polish cavalry, rushing about like shepherds’ dogs in charge of a flock, caracoling up
and down between the troops and the crowd, to keep the gazers within their proper bounds. But for this slight flutter
of movement, the whole scene might have been taking place in the courtyard of the palace of the Sleeping Beauty. The
very spring breeze, ruffling up the long fur on the grenadiers’ bearskins, bore witness to the men’s immobility, as the
smothered murmur of the crowd emphasized their silence. Now and again the jingling of Chinese bells, or a chance blow
to a big drum, woke the reverberating echoes of the Imperial Palace with a sound like the far-off rumblings of
thunder.

An indescribable, unmistakable enthusiasm was manifest in the expectancy of the multitude. France was about to take
farewell of Napoleon on the eve of a campaign of which the meanest citizen foresaw the perils. The existence of the
French Empire was at stake — to be, or not to be. The whole citizen population seemed to be as much inspired with this
thought as that other armed population standing in serried and silent ranks in the enclosed space, with the Eagles and
the genius of Napoleon hovering above them.

Those very soldiers were the hope of France, her last drop of blood; and this accounted for not a little of the
anxious interest of the scene. Most of the gazers in the crowd had bidden farewell — perhaps farewell for ever — to the
men who made up the rank and file of the battalions; and even those most hostile to the Emperor, in their hearts, put
up fervent prayers to heaven for the glory of France; and those most weary of the struggle with the rest of Europe had
left their hatreds behind as they passed in under the Triumphal Arch. They too felt that in the hour of danger Napoleon
meant France herself.

The clock of the Tuileries struck the half-hour. In a moment the hum of the crowd ceased. The silence was so deep
that you might have heard a child speak. The old noble and his daughter, wholly intent, seeming to live only by their
eyes, caught a distinct sound of spurs and clank of swords echoing up under the sonorous peristyle.

And suddenly there appeared a short, somewhat stout figure in a green uniform, white trousers, and riding boots; a
man wearing on his head a cocked hat well-nigh as magically potent as its wearer; the broad red ribbon of the Legion of
Honor rose and fell on his breast, and a short sword hung at his side. At one and the same moment the man was seen by
all eyes in all parts of the square.

Immediately the drums beat a salute, both bands struck up a martial refrain, caught and repeated like a fugue by
every instrument from the thinnest flutes to the largest drum. The clangor of that call to arms thrilled through every
soul. The colors dropped, and the men presented arms, one unanimous rhythmical movement shaking every bayonet from the
foremost front near the Palace to the last rank in the Place du Carrousel. The words of command sped from line to line
like echoes. The whole enthusiastic multitude sent up a shout of “Long live the Emperor!”

Everything shook, quivered, and thrilled at last. Napoleon had mounted his horse. It was his movement that had put
life into those silent masses of men; the dumb instruments had found a voice at his coming, the Eagles and the colors
had obeyed the same impulse which had brought emotion into all faces.

The very walls of the high galleries of the old palace seemed to cry aloud, “Long live the Emperor!”

There was something preternatural about it — it was magic at work, a counterfeit presentment of the power of God; or
rather it was a fugitive image of a reign itself so fugitive.

And he the centre of such love, such enthusiasm and devotion, and so many prayers, he for whom the sun had
driven the clouds from the sky, was sitting there on his horse, three paces in front of his Golden Squadron, with the
grand Marshal on his left, and the Marshal-inwaiting on his right. Amid all the outburst of enthusiasm at his presence
not a feature of his face appeared to alter.

“Oh! yes. At Wagram, in the thick of the firing, on the field of Borodino, among the dead, always as cool as a
cucumber he is!” said the grenadier, in answer to the questions with which the young girl plied him. For a
moment Julie was absorbed in the contemplation of that face, so quiet in the security of conscious power. The Emperor
noticed Mlle. de Chatillonest, and leaned to make some brief remark to Duroc, which drew a smile from the Grand
Marshal. Then the review began.

If hitherto the young lady’s attention had been divided between Napoleon’s impassive face and the blue, red, and
green ranks of troops, from this time forth she was wholly intent upon a young officer moving among the lines as they
performed their swift symmetrical evolutions. She watched him gallop with tireless activity to and from the group where
the plainly dressed Napoleon shone conspicuous. The officer rode a splendid black horse. His handsome sky-blue uniform
marked him out amid the variegated multitude as one of the Emperor’s orderly staff-officers. His gold lace glittered in
the sunshine which lighted up the aigrette on his tall, narrow shako, so that the gazer might have compared him to a
will-o’-the-wisp, or to a visible spirit emanating from the Emperor to infuse movement into those battalions whose
swaying bayonets flashed into flames; for, at a mere glance from his eyes, they broke and gathered again, surging to
and fro like the waves in a bay, or again swept before him like the long ridges of high-crested wave which the vexed
Ocean directs against the shore.

When the manoeuvres were over the officer galloped back at full speed, pulled up his horse, and awaited orders. He
was not ten paces from Julie as he stood before the Emperor, much as General Rapp stands in Gerard’s Battle of
Austerlitz. The young girl could behold her lover in all his soldierly splendor.

Colonel Victor d’Aiglemont, barely thirty years of age, was tall, slender, and well made. His well-proportioned
figure never showed to better advantage than now as he exerted his strength to hold in the restive animal, whose back
seemed to curve gracefully to the rider’s weight. His brown masculine face possessed the indefinable charm of perfectly
regular features combined with youth. The fiery eyes under the broad forehead, shaded by thick eyebrows and long
lashes, looked like white ovals bordered by an outline of black. His nose had the delicate curve of an eagle’s beak;
the sinuous lines of the inevitable black moustache enhanced the crimson of the lips. The brown and tawny shades which
overspread the wide high-colored cheeks told a tale of unusual vigor, and his whole face bore the impress of dashing
courage. He was the very model which French artists seek today for the typical hero of Imperial France. The horse which
he rode was covered with sweat, the animal’s quivering head denoted the last degree of restiveness; his hind hoofs were
set down wide apart and exactly in a line, he shook his long thick tail to the wind; in his fidelity to his master he
seemed to be a visible presentment of that master’s devotion to the Emperor.

Julie saw her lover watching intently for the Emperor’s glances, and felt a momentary pang of jealousy, for as yet
he had not given her a look. Suddenly at a word from his sovereign Victor gripped his horse’s flanks and set out at a
gallop, but the animal took fright at a shadow cast by a post, shied, backed, and reared up so suddenly that his rider
was all but thrown off. Julie cried out, her face grew white, people looked at her curiously, but she saw no one, her
eyes were fixed upon the too mettlesome beast. The officer gave the horse a sharp admonitory cut with the whip, and
galloped off with Napoleon’s order.

Julie was so absorbed, so dizzy with sights and sounds, that unconsciously she clung to her father’s arm so tightly
that he could read her thoughts by the varying pressure of her fingers. When Victor was all but flung out of the
saddle, she clutched her father with a convulsive grip as if she herself were in danger of falling, and the old man
looked at his daughter’s tell-tale face with dark and painful anxiety. Pity, jealousy, something even of regret stole
across every drawn and wrinkled line of mouth and brow. When he saw the unwonted light in Julie’s eyes, when that cry
broke from her, when the convulsive grasp of her fingers drew away the veil and put him in possession of her secret,
then with that revelation of her love there came surely some swift revelation of the future. Mournful forebodings could
be read in his own face.

Julie’s soul seemed at that moment to have passed into the officer’s being. A torturing thought more cruel than any
previous dread contracted the old man’s painworn features, as he saw the glance of understanding that passed between
the soldier and Julie. The girl’s eyes were wet, her cheeks glowed with unwonted color. Her father turned abruptly and
led her away into the Garden of the Tuileries.

“Why, father,” she cried, “there are still the regiments in the Place du Carrousel to be passed in review.”

Julie could readily believe the words when she glanced at his face; he looked quite worn out by his fatherly
anxieties.

“Are you feeling very ill?” she asked indifferently, her mind was so full of other thoughts.

“Every day is a reprieve for me, is it not?” returned her father.

“Now do you mean to make me miserable again by talking about your death? I was in such spirits! Do pray get rid of
those horrid gloomy ideas of yours.”

The father heaved a sigh. “Ah! spoiled child,” he cried, “the best hearts are sometimes very cruel. We devote our
whole lives to you, you are our one thought, we plan for your welfare, sacrifice our tastes to your whims, idolize you,
give the very blood in our veins for you, and all this is nothing, is it? Alas! yes, you take it all as a matter of
course. If we would always have your smiles and your disdainful love, we should need the power of God in heaven. Then
comes another, a lover, a husband, and steals away your heart.”

Julie looked in amazement at her father; he walked slowly along, and there was no light in the eyes which he turned
upon her.

“You hide yourself even from us,” he continued, “but, perhaps, also you hide yourself from yourself —”

“What do you mean by that, father?”

“I think that you have secrets from me, Julie. — You love,” he went on quickly, as he saw the color rise to her
face. “Oh! I hoped that you would stay with your old father until he died. I hoped to keep you with me, still radiant
and happy, to admire you as you were but so lately. So long as I knew nothing of your future I could believe in a happy
lot for you; but now I cannot possibly take away with me a hope of happiness for your life, for you love the colonel
even more than the cousin. I can no longer doubt it.”

“And why should I be forbidden to love him?” asked Julie, with lively curiosity in her face.

“Ah, my Julie, you would not understand me,” sighed the father.

“Tell me, all the same,” said Julie, with an involuntary petulant gesture.

“Very well, child, listen to me. Girls are apt to imagine noble and enchanting and totally imaginary figures in
their own minds; they have fanciful extravagant ideas about men, and sentiment, and life; and then they innocently
endow somebody or other with all the perfections of their day-dreams, and put their trust in him. They fall in love
with this imaginary creature in the man of their choice; and then, when it is too late to escape from their fate,
behold their first idol, the illusion made fair with their fancies, turns to an odious skeleton. Julie, I would rather
have you fall in love with an old man than with the Colonel. Ah! if you could but see things from the standpoint of ten
years hence, you would admit that my old experience was right. I know what Victor is, that gaiety of his is simply
animal spirits — the gaiety of the barracks. He has no ability, and he is a spendthrift. He is one of those men whom
Heaven created to eat and digest four meals a day, to sleep, to fall in love with the first woman that comes to hand,
and to fight. He does not understand life. His kind heart, for he has a kind heart, will perhaps lead him to give his
purse to a sufferer or to a comrade; but he is careless, he has not the delicacy of heart which makes us
slaves to a woman’s happiness, he is ignorant, he is selfish. There are plenty of buts —”

“But, father, he must surely be clever, he must have ability, or he would not be a colonel —”

“My dear, Victor will be a colonel all his life. — I have seen no one who appears to me to be worthy of you,” the
old father added, with a kind of enthusiasm.

He paused an instant, looked at his daughter, and added, “Why, my poor Julie, you are still too young, too fragile,
too delicate for the cares and rubs of married life. D’Aiglemont’s relations have spoiled him, just as your mother and
I have spoiled you. What hope is there that you two could agree, with two imperious wills diametrically opposed to each
other? You will be either the tyrant or the victim, and either alternative means, for a wife, an equal sum of
misfortune. But you are modest and sweet-natured, you would yield from the first. In short,” he added, in a quivering
voice, “there is a grace of feeling in you which would never be valued, and then ——” he broke off, for the tears
overcame him.

“Victor will give you pain through all the girlish qualities of your young nature,” he went on, after a pause. “I
know what soldiers are, my Julie; I have been in the army. In a man of that kind, love very seldom gets the better of
old habits, due partly to the miseries amid which soldiers live, partly to the risks they run in a life of
adventure.”

“Then you mean to cross my inclinations, do you, father?” asked Julie, half in earnest, half in jest. “Am I to marry
to please you and not to please myself?”

“To please me!” cried her father, with a start of surprise. “To please me, child? when you will not hear
the voice that upbraids you so tenderly very much longer! But I have always heard children impute personal motives for
the sacrifices that their parents make for them. Marry Victor, my Julie! Some day you will bitterly deplore his
ineptitude, his thriftless ways, his selfishness, his lack of delicacy, his inability to understand love, and countless
troubles arising through him. Then, remember, that here under these trees your old father’s prophetic voice sounded in
your ears in vain.”

He said no more; he had detected a rebellious shake of the head on his daughter’s part. Both made several paces
towards the carriage which was waiting for them at the grating. During that interval of silence, the young girl stole a
glance at her father’s face, and little by little her sullen brow cleared. The intense pain visible on his bowed
forehead made a lively impression upon her.

“Father,” she began in gentle tremulous tones, “I promise to say no more about Victor until you have overcome your
prejudices against him.”

The old man looked at her in amazement. Two tears which filled his eyes overflowed down his withered cheeks. He
could not take Julie in his arms in that crowded place; but he pressed her hand tenderly. A few minutes later when they
had taken their places in the cabriolet, all the anxious thought which had gathered about his brow had completely
disappeared. Julie’s pensive attitude gave him far less concern than the innocent joy which had betrayed her secret
during the review.

Nearly a year had passed since the Emperor’s last review. In early March 1814 a caleche was rolling along the
highroad from Amboise to Tours. As the carriage came out from beneath the green-roofed aisle of walnut trees by the
post-house of la Frilliere, the horses dashed forward with such speed that in a moment they gained the bridge built
across the Cise at the point of its confluence with the Loire. There, however, they come to a sudden stand. One of the
traces had given way in consequence of the furious pace at which the post-boy, obedient to his orders, had urged on
four horses, the most vigorous of their breed. Chance, therefore, gave the two recently awakened occupants of the
carriage an opportunity of seeing one of the most lovely landscapes along the enchanting banks of the Loire, and that
at their full leisure.

At a glance the travelers could see to the right the whole winding course of the Cise meandering like a silver snake
among the meadows, where the grass had taken the deep, bright green of early spring. To the left lay the Loire in all
its glory. A chill morning breeze, ruffling the surface of the stately river, had fretted the broad sheets of water far
and wide into a network of ripples, which caught the gleams of the sun, so that the green islets here and there in its
course shone like gems set in a gold necklace. On the opposite bank the fair rich meadows of Touraine stretched away as
far as the eye could see; the low hills of the Cher, the only limits to the view, lay on the far horizon, a luminous
line against the clear blue sky. Tours itself, framed by the trees on the islands in a setting of spring leaves, seemed
to rise like Venice out of the waters, and her old cathedral towers soaring in air were blended with the pale fantastic
cloud shapes in the sky.

Over the side of the bridge, where the carriage had come to a stand, the traveler looks along a line of cliffs
stretching as far as Tours. Nature in some freakish mood must have raised these barriers of rock, undermined
incessantly by the rippling Loire at their feet, for a perpetual wonder for spectators. The village of Vouvray nestles,
as it were, among the clefts and crannies of the crags, which begin to describe a bend at the junction of the Loire and
Cise. A whole population of vine-dressers lives, in fact, in appalling insecurity in holes in their jagged sides for
the whole way between Vouvray and Tours. In some places there are three tiers of dwellings hollowed out, one above the
other, in the rock, each row communicating with the next by dizzy staircases cut likewise in the face of the cliff. A
little girl in a short red petticoat runs out into her garden on the roof of another dwelling; you can watch a wreath
of hearth-smoke curling up among the shoots and trails of the vines. Men are at work in their almost perpendicular
patches of ground, an old woman sits tranquilly spinning under a blossoming almond tree on a crumbling mass of rock,
and smiles down on the dismay of the travelers far below her feet. The cracks in the ground trouble her as little as
the precarious state of the old wall, a pendant mass of loose stones, only kept in position by the crooked stems of its
ivy mantle. The sound of coopers’ mallets rings through the skyey caves; for here, where Nature stints human industry
of soil, the soil is everywhere tilled, and everywhere fertile.

No view along the whole course of the Loire can compare with the rich landscape of Touraine, here outspread beneath
the traveler’s eyes. The triple picture, thus barely sketched in outline, is one of those scenes which the imagination
engraves for ever upon the memory; let a poet fall under its charm, and he shall be haunted by visions which shall
reproduce its romantic loveliness out of the vague substance of dreams.

As the carriage stopped on the bridge over the Cise, white sails came out here and there from among the islands in
the Loire to add new grace to the perfect view. The subtle scent of the willows by the water’s edge was mingled with
the damp odor of the breeze from the river. The monotonous chant of a goat-herd added a plaintive note to the sound of
birds’ songs in a chorus which never ends; the cries of the boatmen brought tidings of distant busy life. Here was
Touraine in all its glory, and the very height of the splendor of spring. Here was the one peaceful district in France
in those troublous days; for it was so unlikely that a foreign army should trouble its quiet that Touraine might be
said to defy invasion.

As soon as the caleche stopped, a head covered with a foraging cap was put out of the window, and soon afterwards an
impatient military man flung open the carriage door and sprang down into the road to pick a quarrel with the postilion,
but the skill with which the Tourangeau was repairing the trace restored Colonel d’Aiglemont’s equanimity. He went back
to the carriage, stretched himself to relieve his benumbed muscles, yawned, looked about him, and finally laid a hand
on the arm of a young woman warmly wrapped up in a furred pelisse.

“Come, Julie,” he said hoarsely, “just wake up and take a look at this country. It is magnificent.”

Julie put her head out of the window. She wore a traveling cap of sable fur. Nothing could be seen of her but her
face, for the whole of her person was completely concealed by the folds of her fur pelisse. The young girl who tripped
to the review at the Tuileries with light footsteps and joy and gladness in her heart was scarcely recognizable in
Julie d’Aiglemont. Her face, delicate as ever, had lost the rose-color which once gave it so rich a glow. A few
straggling locks of black hair, straightened out by the damp night air, enhanced its dead whiteness, and all its life
and sparkle seemed to be torpid. Yet her eyes glittered with preternatural brightness in spite of the violet shadows
under the lashes upon her wan cheeks.

She looked out with indifferent eyes over the fields towards the Cher, at the islands in the river, at the line of
the crags of Vouvray stretching along the Loire towards Tours; then she sank back as soon as possible into her seat in
the caleche. She did not care to give a glance to the enchanting valley of the Cise.

“Yes, it is wonderful,” she said, and out in the open air her voice sounded weak and faint to the last degree.
Evidently she had had her way with her father, to her misfortune.

“Would you not like to live here, Julie?”

“Yes; here or anywhere,” she answered listlessly.

“Do you feel ill?” asked Colonel d’Aiglemont.

“No, not at all,” she answered with momentary energy; and, smiling at her husband, she added, “I should like to go
to sleep.”

Suddenly there came a sound of a horse galloping towards them. Victor d’Aiglemont dropped his wife’s hand and turned
to watch the bend in the road. No sooner had he taken his eyes from Julie’s pale face than all the assumed gaiety died
out of it; it was as if a light had been extinguished. She felt no wish to look at the landscape, no curiosity to see
the horseman who was galloping towards them at such a furious pace, and, ensconcing herself in her corner, stared out
before her at the hindquarters of the post-horses, looking as blank as any Breton peasant listening to his
recteur’s sermon.

Suddenly a young man riding a valuable horse came out from behind the clump of poplars and flowering briar-rose.

“It is an Englishman,” remarked the Colonel.

“Lord bless you, yes, General,” said the post-boy; “he belongs to the race of fellows who have a mind to gobble up
France, they say.”

The stranger was one of the foreigners traveling in France at the time when Napoleon detained all British subjects
within the limits of the Empire, by way of reprisals for the violation of the Treaty of Amiens, an outrage of
international law perpetrated by the Court of St. James. These prisoners, compelled to submit to the Emperor’s
pleasure, were not all suffered to remain in the houses where they were arrested, nor yet in the places of residence
which at first they were permitted to choose. Most of the English colony in Touraine had been transplanted thither from
different places where their presence was supposed to be inimical to the interests of the Continental Policy.

The young man, who was taking the tedium of the early morning hours on horseback, was one of these victims of
bureaucratic tyranny. Two years previously, a sudden order from the Foreign Office had dragged him from Montpellier,
whither he had gone on account of consumptive tendencies. He glanced at the Comte d’Aiglemont, saw that he was a
military man, and deliberately looked away, turning his head somewhat abruptly towards the meadows by the Cise.

“The English are all as insolent as if the globe belonged to them,” muttered the Colonel. “Luckily, Soult will give
them a thrashing directly.”

The prisoner gave a glance to the caleche as he rode by. Brief though that glance was, he had yet time to notice the
sad expression which lent an indefinable charm to the Countess’ pensive face. Many men are deeply moved by the mere
semblance of suffering in a woman; they take the look of pain for a sign of constancy or of love. Julie herself was so
much absorbed in the contemplation of the opposite cushion that she saw neither the horse nor the rider. The damaged
trace meanwhile had been quickly and strongly repaired; the Count stepped into his place again; and the post-boy, doing
his best to make up for lost time, drove the carriage rapidly along the embankment. On they drove under the overhanging
cliffs, with their picturesque vine-dressers’ huts and stores of wine maturing in their dark sides, till in the
distance uprose the spire of the famous Abbey of Marmoutiers, the retreat of St. Martin.

“What can that diaphanous milord want with us?” exclaimed the Colonel, turning to assure himself that the horseman
who had followed them from the bridge was the young Englishman.

After all, the stranger committed no breach of good manners by riding along on the footway, and Colonel d’Aiglemont
was fain to lie back in his corner after sending a scowl in the Englishman’s direction. But in spite of his hostile
instincts, he could not help noticing the beauty of the animal and the graceful horsemanship of the rider. The young
man’s face was of that pale, fair-complexioned, insular type, which is almost girlish in the softness and delicacy of
its color and texture. He was tall, thin, and fair-haired, dressed with the extreme and elaborate neatness
characteristic of a man of fashion in prudish England. Any one might have thought that bashfulness rather than pleasure
at the sight of the Countess had called up that flush into his face. Once only Julie raised her eyes and looked at the
stranger, and then only because she was in a manner compelled to do so, for her husband called upon her to admire the
action of the thoroughbred. It so happened that their glances clashed; and the shy Englishman, instead of riding
abreast of the carriage, fell behind on this, and followed them at a distance of a few paces.

Yet the Countess had scarcely given him a glance; she saw none of the various perfections, human and equine,
commended to her notice, and fell back again in the carriage, with a slight movement of the eyelids intended to express
her acquiescence in her husband’s views. The Colonel fell asleep again, and both husband and wife reached Tours without
another word. Not one of those enchanting views of everchanging landscape through which they sped had drawn so much as
a glance from Julie’s eyes.

Mme. d’Aiglemont looked now and again at her sleeping husband. While she looked, a sudden jolt shook something down
upon her knees. It was her father’s portrait, a miniature which she wore suspended about her neck by a black cord. At
the sight of it, the tears, till then kept back, overflowed her eyes, but no one, save perhaps the Englishman, saw them
glitter there for a brief moment before they dried upon her pale cheeks.

Colonel d’Aiglemont was on his way to the South. Marshal Soult was repelling an English invasion of Bearn; and
d’Aiglemont, the bearer of the Emperor’s orders to the Marshal, seized the opportunity of taking his wife as far as
Tours to leave her with an elderly relative of his own, far away from the dangers threatening Paris.

Very shortly the carriage rolled over the paved road of Tours, over the bridge, along the Grande–Rue, and stopped at
last before the old mansion of the ci-devant Marquise de Listomere–Landon.

The Marquise de Listomere–Landon, with her white hair, pale face, and shrewd smile, was one of those fine old ladies
who still seem to wear the paniers of the eighteenth century, and affects caps of an extinct mode. They are nearly
always caressing in their manners, as if the heyday of love still lingered on for these septuagenarian portraits of the
age of Louis Quinze, with the faint perfume of poudre a la marechale always clinging about them. Bigoted
rather than pious, and less of bigots than they seem, women who can tell a story well and talk still better, their
laughter comes more readily for an old memory than for a new jest — the present intrudes upon them.

When an old waiting-woman announced to the Marquise de Listomere–Landon (to give her the title which she was soon to
resume) the arrival of a nephew whom she had not seen since the outbreak of the war with Spain, the old lady took off
her spectacles with alacrity, shut the Galerie de l’ancienne Cour (her favorite work), and recovered something
like youthful activity, hastening out upon the flight of steps to greet the young couple there.

Aunt and niece exchanged a rapid glance of survey.

“Good-morning, dear aunt,” cried the Colonel, giving the old lady a hasty embrace. “I am bringing a young lady to
put under your wing. I have come to put my treasure in your keeping. My Julie is neither jealous nor a coquette, she is
as good as an angel. I hope that she will not be spoiled here,” he added, suddenly interrupting himself.

“Scapegrace!” returned the Marquise, with a satirical glance at her nephew.

She did not wait for her niece to approach her, but with a certain kindly graciousness went forward herself to kiss
Julie, who stood there thoughtfully, to all appearance more embarrassed than curious concerning her new relation.

“So we are to make each other’s acquaintance, are we, my love?” the Marquise continued. “Do not be too much alarmed
of me. I always try not to be an old woman with young people.”

On the way to the drawing-room, the Marquise ordered breakfast for her guests in provincial fashion; but the Count
checked his aunt’s flow of words by saying soberly that he could only remain in the house while the horses were
changing. On this the three hurried into the drawing-room. The Colonel had barely time to tell the story of the
political and military events which had compelled him to ask his aunt for a shelter for his young wife. While he talked
on without interruption, the older lady looked from her nephew to her niece, and took the sadness in Julie’s white face
for grief at the enforced separation. “Eh! eh!” her looks seemed to say, “these young things are in love with each
other.”

The crack of the postilion’s whip sounded outside in the silent old grass-grown courtyard. Victor embraced his aunt
once more, and rushed out.

“Good-bye, dear,” he said, kissing his wife, who had followed him down to the carriage.

“Oh! Victor, let me come still further with you,” she pleaded coaxingly. “I do not want to leave you ——”

“So you are very fond of my poor Victor?” said the Marquise, interrogating her niece with one of those sagacious
glances which dowagers give younger women.

“Alas, madame!” said Julie, “must one not love a man well indeed to marry him?”

The words were spoken with an artless accent which revealed either a pure heart or inscrutable depths. How could a
woman, who had been the friend of Duclos and the Marechal de Richelieu, refrain from trying to read the riddle of this
marriage? Aunt and niece were standing on the steps, gazing after the fast vanishing caleche. The look in the young
Countess’ eyes did not mean love as the Marquise understood it. The good lady was a Provencale, and her passions had
been lively.

“So you were captivated by my good-for-nothing of a nephew?” she asked.

Involuntarily Julie shuddered, something in the experienced coquette’s look and tone seemed to say that Mme. de
Listomere–Landon’s knowledge of her husband’s character went perhaps deeper than his wife’s. Mme. d’Aiglemont, in
dismay, took refuge in this transparent dissimulation, ready to her hand, the first resource of an artless unhappiness.
Mme. de Listomere appeared to be satisfied with Julie’s answers; but in her secret heart she rejoiced to think that
here was a love affair on hand to enliven her solitude, for that her niece had some amusing flirtation on foot she was
fully convinced.

In the great drawing-room, hung with tapestry framed in strips of gilding, young Mme. d’Aiglemont sat before a
blazing fire, behind a Chinese screen placed to shut out the cold draughts from the window, and her heavy mood scarcely
lightened. Among the old eighteenth-century furniture, under the old paneled ceiling, it was not very easy to be gay.
Yet the young Parisienne took a sort of pleasure in this entrance upon a life of complete solitude and in the solemn
silence of the old provincial house. She exchanged a few words with the aunt, a stranger, to whom she had written a
bride’s letter on her marriage, and then sat as silent as if she had been listening to an opera. Not until two hours
had been spent in an atmosphere of quiet befitting la Trappe, did she suddenly awaken to a sense of uncourteous
behavior, and bethink herself of the short answers which she had given her aunt. Mme. de Listomere, with the gracious
tact characteristic of a bygone age, had respected her niece’s mood. When Mme. d’Aiglemont became conscious of her
shortcomings, the dowager sat knitting, though as a matter of fact she had several times left the room to superintend
preparations in the Green Chamber, whither the Countess’ luggage had been transported; now, however, she had returned
to her great armchair, and stole a glance from time to time at this young relative. Julie felt ashamed of giving way to
irresistible broodings, and tried to earn her pardon by laughing at herself.

“My dear child, we know the sorrows of widowhood,” returned her aunt. But only the eyes of forty years
could have distinguished the irony hovering about the old lady’s mouth.

Next morning the Countess improved. She talked. Mme. de Listomere no longer despaired of fathoming the new-made
wife, whom yesterday she had set down as a dull, unsociable creature, and discoursed on the delights of the country, of
dances, of houses where they could visit. All that day the Marquise’s questions were so many snares; it was the old
habit of the old Court, she could not help setting traps to discover her niece’s character. For several days Julie,
plied with temptations, steadfastly declined to seek amusement abroad; and much as the old lady’s pride longed to
exhibit her pretty niece, she was fain to renounce all hope of taking her into society, for the young Countess was
still in morning for her father, and found in her loss and her mourning dress a pretext for her sadness and desire for
seclusion.

By the end of the week the dowager admired Julie’s angelic sweetness of disposition, her diffident charm, her
indulgent temper, and thenceforward began to take a prodigious interest in the mysterious sadness gnawing at this young
heart. The Countess was one of those women who seem born to be loved and to bring happiness with them. Mme. de
Listomere found her niece’s society grown so sweet and precious, that she doted upon Julie, and could no longer think
of parting with her. A month sufficed to establish an eternal friendship between the two ladies. The dowager noticed,
not without surprise, the changes that took place in Mme. d’Aiglemont; gradually her bright color died away, and her
face became dead white. Yet, Julie’s spirits rose as the bloom faded from her cheeks. Sometimes the dowager’s sallies
provoked outbursts of merriment or peals of laughter, promptly repressed, however, by some clamorous thought.

Mme. de Listomere had guessed by this time that it was neither Victor’s absence nor a father’s death which threw a
shadow over her niece’s life; but her mind was so full of dark suspicions, that she found it difficult to lay a finger
upon the real cause of the mischief. Possibly truth is only discoverable by chance. A day came, however, at length when
Julie flashed out before her aunt’s astonished eyes into a complete forgetfulness of her marriage; she recovered the
wild spirits of careless girlhood. Mme. de Listomere then and there made up her mind to fathom the depths of this soul,
for its exceeding simplicity was as inscrutable as dissimulation.

Night was falling. The two ladies were sitting by the window which looked out upon the street, and Julie was looking
thoughtful again, when some one went by on horseback.

“There goes one of your victims,” said the Marquise.

Mme. d’Aiglemont looked up; dismay and surprise blended in her face.

“He is a young Englishman, the Honorable Arthur Ormand, Lord Grenville’s eldest son. His history is interesting. His
physician sent him to Montpellier in 1802; it was hoped that in that climate he might recover from the lung complaint
which was gaining ground. He was detained, like all his fellow-countrymen, by Bonaparte when war broke out. That
monster cannot live without fighting. The young Englishman, by way of amusing himself, took to studying his own
complaint, which was believed to be incurable. By degrees he acquired a liking for anatomy and physic, and took quite a
craze for that kind of thing, a most extraordinary taste in a man of quality, though the Regent certainly amused
himself with chemistry! In short, Monsieur Arthur made astonishing progress in his studies; his health did the same
under the faculty of Montpellier; he consoled his captivity, and at the same time his cure was thoroughly completed.
They say that he spent two whole years in a cowshed, living on cresses and the milk of a cow brought from Switzerland,
breathing as seldom as he could, and never speaking a word. Since he come to Tours he has lived quite alone; he is as
proud as a peacock; but you have certainly made a conquest of him, for probably it is not on my account that he has
ridden under the window twice every day since you have been here. — He has certainly fallen in love with you.”

That last phrase roused the Countess like magic. Her involuntary start and smile took the Marquise by surprise. So
far from showing a sign of the instinctive satisfaction felt by the most strait-laced of women when she learns that she
has destroyed the peace of mind of some male victim, there was a hard, haggard expression in Julie’s face — a look of
repulsion amounting almost to loathing.

A woman who loves will put the whole world under the ban of Love’s empire for the sake of the one whom she loves;
but such a woman can laugh and jest; and Julie at that moment looked as if the memory of some recently escaped peril
was too sharp and fresh not to bring with it a quick sensation of pain. Her aunt, by this time convinced that Julie did
not love her nephew, was stupefied by the discovery that she loved nobody else. She shuddered lest a further discovery
should show her Julie’s heart disenchanted, lest the experience of a day, or perhaps of a night, should have revealed
to a young wife the full extent of Victor’s emptiness.

“If she has found him out, there is an end of it,” thought the dowager. “My nephew will soon be made to feel the
inconveniences of wedded life.”

The Marquise now proposed to convert Julie to the monarchical doctrines of the times of Louis Quinze; but a few
hours later she discovered, or, more properly speaking, guessed, the not uncommon state of affairs, and the real cause
of her niece’s low spirits.

Julie turned thoughtful on a sudden, and went to her room earlier than usual. When her maid left her for the night,
she still sat by the fire in the yellow velvet depths of a great chair, an old-world piece of furniture as well suited
for sorrow as for happy people. Tears flowed, followed by sighs and meditation. After a while she drew a little table
to her, sought writing materials, and began to write. The hours went by swiftly. Julie’s confidences made to the sheet
of paper seemed to cost her dear; every sentence set her dreaming, and at last she suddenly burst into tears. The
clocks were striking two. Her head, grown heavy as a dying woman’s, was bowed over her breast. When she raised it, her
aunt appeared before her as suddenly as if she had stepped out of the background of tapestry upon the walls.

“What can be the matter with you, child?” asked the Marquise. “Why are you sitting up so late? And why, in the first
place, are you crying alone, at your age?”

Without further ceremony she sat down beside her niece, her eyes the while devouring the unfinished letter.

“Were you writing to your husband?”

“Do I know where he is?” returned the Countess.

Her aunt thereupon took up the sheet and proceeded to read it. She had brought her spectacles; the deed was
premeditated. The innocent writer of the letter allowed her to take it without the slightest remark. It was neither
lack of dignity nor consciousness of secret guilt which left her thus without energy. Her aunt had come in upon her at
a crisis. She was helpless; right or wrong, reticence and confidence, like all things else, were matters of
indifference. Like some young maid who had heaped scorn upon her lover, and feels so lonely and sad when evening comes,
that she longs for him to come back or for a heart to which she can pour out her sorrow, Julie allowed her aunt to
violate the seal which honor places upon an open letter, and sat musing while the Marquise read on:—

“MY DEAR LOUISA— Why do you ask so often for the fulfilment of as rash a promise as two young and inexperienced
girls could make? You say that you often ask yourself why I have given no answer to your questions for these six
months. If my silence told you nothing, perhaps you will understand the reasons for it today, as you read the secrets
which I am about to betray. I should have buried them for ever in the depths of my heart if you had not announced your
own approaching marriage. You are about to be married, Louisa. The thought makes me shiver. Poor little one! marry,
yes, in a few months’ time one of the keenest pangs of regret will be the recollection of a self which used to be, of
the two young girls who sat one evening under one of the tallest oak-trees on the hillside at Ecouen, and looked along
the fair valley at our feet in the light of the sunset, which caught us in its glow. We sat on a slab of rock in
ecstasy, which sobered down into melancholy of the gentlest. You were the first to discover that the far-off sun spoke
to us of the future. How inquisitive and how silly we were! Do you remember all the absurd things we said and did? We
embraced each other; ‘like lovers,’ said we. We solemnly promised that the first bride should faithfully reveal to the
other the mysteries of marriage, the joys which our childish minds imagined to be so delicious. That evening will
complete your despair, Louisa. In those days you were young and beautiful and careless, if not radiantly happy; a few
days of marriage, and you will be, what I am already — ugly, wretched, and old. Need I tell you how proud I was and how
vain and glad to be married to Colonel Victor d’Aiglemont? And besides, how could I tell you now? for I cannot remember
that old self. A few moments turned my girlhood to a dream. All through the memorable day which consecrated a chain,
the extent of which was hidden from me, my behavior was not free from reproach. Once and again my father tried to
repress my spirits; the joy which I showed so plainly was thought unbefitting the occasion, my talk scarcely innocent,
simply because I was so innocent. I played endless child’s tricks with my bridal veil, my wreath, my gown. Left alone
that night in the room whither I had been conducted in state, I planned a piece of mischief to tease Victor. While I
awaited his coming, my heart beat wildly, as it used to do when I was a child stealing into the drawing-room on the
last day of the old year to catch a glimpse of the New Year’s gifts piled up there in heaps. When my husband came in
and looked for me, my smothered laughter ringing out from beneath the lace in which I had shrouded myself, was the last
outburst of the delicious merriment which brightened our games in childhood . . . ”

When the dowager had finished reading the letter, and after such a beginning the rest must have been sad indeed, she
slowly laid her spectacles on the table, put the letter down beside them, and looked fixedly at her niece. Age had not
dimmed the fire in those green eyes as yet.

“My little girl,” she said, “a married woman cannot write such a letter as this to a young unmarried woman; it is
scarcely proper —”

“So I was thinking,” Julie broke in upon her aunt. “I felt ashamed of myself while you were reading it.”

“If a dish at table is not to our taste, there is no occasion to disgust others with it, child,” the old lady
continued benignly, “especially when marriage has seemed to us all, from Eve downwards, so excellent an institution
. . . You have no mother?”

The Countess trembled, then she raised her face meekly, and said:

“I have missed my mother many times already during the past year; but I have myself to blame, I would not listen to
my father. He was opposed to my marriage; he disapproved of Victor as a son-inlaw.”

She looked at her aunt. The old face was lighted up with a kindly look, and a thrill of joy dried Julie’s tears. She
held out her young, soft hand to the old Marquise, who seemed to ask for it, and the understanding between the two
women was completed by the close grasp of their fingers.

“Poor orphan child!”

The words came like a final flash of enlightenment to Julie. It seemed to her that she heard her father’s prophetic
voice again.

“Your hands are burning! Are they always like this?” asked the Marquise.

“The fever only left me seven or eight days ago.”

“You had a fever upon you, and said nothing about it to me!”

“I have had it for a year,” said Julie, with a kind of timid anxiety.

“My good little angel, then your married life hitherto has been one long time of suffering?”

Julie did not venture to reply, but an affirmative sign revealed the whole truth.

“Then you are unhappy?”

“On! no, no, aunt. Victor loves me, he almost idolizes me, and I adore him, he is so kind.”

“Yes, you love him; but you avoid him, do you not?”

“Yes . . . sometimes . . . He seeks me too often.”

“And often when you are alone you are troubled with the fear that he may suddenly break in on your solitude?”

“Alas! yes, aunt. But, indeed, I love him, I do assure you.”

“Do you not, in your own thoughts, blame yourself because you find it impossible to share his pleasures? Do you
never think at times that marriage is a heavier yoke than an illicit passion could be?”

“Oh, that is just it,” she wept. “It is all a riddle to me, and can you guess it all? My faculties are benumbed, I
have no ideas, I can scarcely see at all. I am weighed down by vague dread, which freezes me till I cannot feel, and
keeps me in continual torpor. I have no voice with which to pity myself, no words to express my trouble. I suffer, and
I am ashamed to suffer when Victor is happy at my cost.”

“Babyish nonsense, and rubbish, all of it!” exclaimed the aunt, and a gay smile, an after-glow of the joys of her
own youth, suddenly lighted up her withered face.

“And do you too laugh!” the younger woman cried despairingly.

“It was just my own case,” the Marquise returned promptly. “And now Victor has left you, you have become a girl
again, recovering a tranquillity without pleasure and without pain, have you not?”

Julie opened wide eyes of bewilderment.

“In fact, my angel, you adore Victor, do you not? But still you would rather be a sister to him than a wife, and, in
short, your marriage is emphatically not a success?”

“Well — no, aunt. But why do you smile?”

“Oh! you are right, poor child! There is nothing very amusing in all this. Your future would be big with more than
one mishap if I had not taken you under my protection, if my old experience of life had not guessed the very innocent
cause of your troubles. My nephew did not deserve his good fortune, the blockhead! In the reign of our well-beloved
Louis Quinze, a young wife in your position would very soon have punished her husband for behaving like a ruffian. The
selfish creature! The men who serve under this Imperial tyrant are all of them ignorant boors. They take brutality for
gallantry; they know no more of women than they know of love; and imagine that because they go out to face death on the
morrow, they may dispense today with all consideration and attentions for us. The time was when a man could love and
die too at the proper time. My niece, I will form you. I will put an end to this unhappy divergence between you, a
natural thing enough, but it would end in mutual hatred and desire for a divorce, always supposing that you did not die
on the way to despair.”

Julie’s amazement equaled her surprise as she listened to her aunt. She was surprised by her language, dimly
divining rather than appreciating the wisdom of the words she heard, and very much dismayed to find what this relative,
out of great experience, passed judgment upon Victor as her father had done, though in somewhat milder terms. Perhaps
some quick prevision of the future crossed her mind; doubtless, at any rate, she felt the heavy weight of the burden
which must inevitably overwhelm her, for she burst into tears, and sprang to the old lady’s arms. “Be my mother,” she
sobbed.

The aunt shed no tears. The Revolution had left old ladies of the Monarchy but few tears to shed. Love, in bygone
days, and the Terror at a later time, had familiarized them with extremes of joy and anguish in such a sort that, amid
the perils of life, they preserved their dignity and coolness, a capacity for sincere but undemonstrative affection
which never disturbed their well-bred self-possession, and a dignity of demeanor which a younger generation has done
very ill to discard.

The dowager took Julie in her arms, and kissed her on the forehead with a tenderness and pity more often found in
women’s ways and manner than in their hearts. Then she coaxed her niece with kind, soothing words, assured her of a
happy future, lulled her with promises of love, and put her to bed as if she had been not a niece, but a daughter, a
much-beloved daughter whose hopes and cares she had made her own. Perhaps the old Marquise had found her own youth and
inexperience and beauty again in this nephew’s wife. And the Countess fell asleep, happy to have found a friend, nay a
mother, to whom she could tell everything freely.

Next morning, when the two women kissed each other with heartfelt kindness, and that look of intelligence which
marks a real advance in friendship, a closer intimacy between two souls, they heard the sound of horsehoofs, and,
turning both together, saw the young Englishman ride slowly past the window, after his wont. Apparently he had made a
certain study of the life led by the two lonely women, for he never failed to ride by as they sat at breakfast, and
again at dinner. His horse slackened pace of its own accord, and for the space of time required to pass the two windows
in the room, its rider turned a melancholy look upon the Countess, who seldom deigned to take the slightest notion of
him. Not so the Marquise. Minds not necessarily little find it difficult to resist the little curiosity which fastens
upon the most trifling event that enlivens provincial life; and the Englishman’s mute way of expressing his timid,
earnest love tickled Mme. de Listomere. For her the periodically recurrent glance became a part of the day’s routine,
hailed daily with new jests. As the two women sat down to table, both of them looked out at the same moment. This time
Julie’s eyes met Arthur’s with such a precision of sympathy that the color rose to her face. The stranger immediately
urged his horse into a gallop and went.

“What is to be done, madame?” asked Julie. “People see this Englishman go past the house, and they will take it for
granted that I—”

“Yes,” interrupted her aunt.

“Well, then, could I not tell him to discontinue his promenades?”

“Would not that be a way of telling him that he was dangerous? You might put that notion into his head. And besides,
can you prevent a man from coming and going as he pleases? Our meals shall be served in another room tomorrow; and when
this young gentleman sees us no longer, there will be an end of making love to you through the window. There, dear
child, that is how a woman of the world does.”

But the measure of Julie’s misfortune was to be filled up. The two women had scarcely risen from table when Victor’s
man arrived in hot haste from Bourges with a letter for the Countess from her husband. The servant had ridden by
unfrequented ways.

Victor sent his wife news of the downfall of the Empire and the capitulation of Paris. He himself had gone over to
the Bourbons, and all France was welcoming them back with transports of enthusiasm. He could not go so far as Tours,
but he begged her to come at once to join him at Orleans, where he hoped to be in readiness with passports for her. His
servant, an old soldier, would be her escort so far as Orleans; he (Victor) believed that the road was still open.

“You have not a moment to lose, madame,” said the man. “The Prussians, Austrians, and English are about to effect a
junction either at Blois or at Orleans.”

A few hours later, Julie’s preparations were made, and she started out upon her journey in an old traveling carriage
lent by her aunt.

“Why should you not come with us to Paris?” she asked, as she put her arms about the Marquise. “Now that the
Bourbons have come back you would be —”

“Even if there had not been this unhoped-for return, I should still have gone to Paris, my poor child, for my advice
is only too necessary to both you and Victor. So I shall make all my preparations for rejoining you there.”

Julie set out. She took her maid with her, and the old soldier galloped beside the carriage as escort. At nightfall,
as they changed horses for the last stage before Blois, Julie grew uneasy. All the way from Amboise she had heard the
sound of wheels behind them, a carriage following hers had kept at the same distance. She stood on the step and looked
out to see who her traveling companions might be, and in the moonlight saw Arthur standing three paces away, gazing
fixedly at the chaise which contained her. Again their eyes met. The Countess hastily flung herself back in her seat,
but a feeling of dread set her pulses throbbing. It seemed to her, as to most innocent and inexperienced young wives,
that she was herself to blame for this love which she had all unwittingly inspired. With this thought came an
instinctive terror, perhaps a sense of her own helplessness before aggressive audacity. One of a man’s strongest
weapons is the terrible power of compelling a woman to think of him when her naturally lively imagination takes alarm
or offence at the thought that she is followed.

The Countess bethought herself of her aunt’s advice, and made up her mind that she would not stir from her place
during the rest of the journey; but every time the horses were changed she heard the Englishman pacing round the two
carriages, and again upon the road heard the importunate sound of the wheels of his caleche. Julie soon began to think
that, when once reunited to her husband, Victor would know how to defend her against this singular persecution.

“Yet suppose that in spite of everything, this young man does not love me?” This was the thought that came last of
all.

No sooner did she reach Orleans than the Prussians stopped the chaise. It was wheeled into an inn-yard and put under
a guard of soldiers. Resistance was out of the question. The foreign soldiers made the three travelers understand by
signs that they were obeying orders, and that no one could be allowed to leave the carriage. For about two hours the
Countess sat in tears, a prisoner surrounded by the guard, who smoked, laughed, and occasionally stared at her with
insolent curiosity. At last, however, she saw her captors fall away from the carriage with a sort of respect, and heard
at the same time the sound of horses entering the yard. Another moment, and a little group of foreign officers, with an
Austrian general at their head, gathered about the door of the traveling carriage.

“Madame,” said the General, “pray accept our apologies. A mistake has been made. You may continue your journey
without fear; and here is a passport which will spare you all further annoyance of any kind.”

Trembling the Countess took the paper, and faltered out some vague words of thanks. She saw Arthur, now wearing an
English uniform, standing beside the General, and could not doubt that this prompt deliverance was due to him. The
young Englishman himself looked half glad, half melancholy; his face was turned away, and he only dared to steal an
occasional glance at Julie’s face.

Thanks to the passport, Mme. d’Aiglemont reached Paris without further misadventure, and there she found her
husband. Victor d’Aiglemont, released from his oath of allegiance to the Emperor, had met with a most flattering
reception from the Comte d’Artois, recently appointed Lieutenant–General of the kingdom by his brother Louis XVIII.
D’Aiglemont received a commission in the Life Guards, equivalent to the rank of general. But amid the rejoicings over
the return of the Bourbons, fate dealt poor Julie a terrible blow. The death of the Marquise de Listomere–Landon was an
irreparable loss. The old lady died of joy and of an accession of gout to the heart when the Duc d’Angouleme came back
to Tours, and the one living being entitled by her age to enlighten Victor, the woman who, by discreet counsels, might
have brought about perfect unanimity of husband and wife, was dead; and Julie felt the full extent of her loss.
Henceforward she must stand alone between herself and her husband. But she was young and timid; there could be no doubt
of the result, or that from the first she would elect to bear her lot in silence. The very perfections of her character
forbade her to venture to swerve from her duties, or to attempt to inquire into the cause of her sufferings, for to put
an end to them would have been to venture on delicate ground, and Julie’s girlish modesty shrank from the thought.

A word as to M. d’Aiglemont’s destinies under the Restoration.

How many men are there whose utter incapacity is a secret kept from most of their acquaintance. For such as these
high rank, high office, illustrious birth, a certain veneer of politeness, and considerable reserve of manner, or the
prestige of great fortunes, are but so many sentinels to turn back critics who would penetrate to the presence
of the real man. Such men are like kings, in that their real figure, character, and life can never be known nor justly
appreciated, because they are always seen from too near or too far. Factitious merit has a way of asking questions and
saying little; and understands the art of putting others forward to save the necessity of posing before them; then,
with a happy knack of its own, it draws and attaches others by the thread of the ruling passion of self-interest,
keeping men of far greater abilities to play like puppets, and despising those whom it has brought down to its own
level. The petty fixed idea naturally prevails; it has the advantage of persistence over the plasticity of great
thoughts.

The observer who should seek to estimate and appraise the negative values of these empty heads needs subtlety rather
than superior wit for the task; patience is a more necessary part of his judicial outfit than great mental grasp,
cunning and tact rather than any elevation or greatness of ideas. Yet skilfully as such usurpers can cover and defend
their weak points, it is difficult to delude wife and mother and children and the house-friend of the family;
fortunately for them, however, these persons almost always keep a secret which in a manner touches the honor of all,
and not unfrequently go so far as to help to foist the imposture upon the public. And if, thanks to such domestic
conspiracy, many a noodle passes current for a man of ability, on the other hand many another who has real ability is
taken for a noodle to redress the balance, and the total average of this kind of false coin in circulation in the state
is a pretty constant quantity.

Bethink yourself now of the part to be played by a clever woman quick to think and feel, mated with a husband of
this kind, and can you not see a vision of lives full of sorrow and self-sacrifice? Nothing upon earth can repay such
hearts so full of love and tender tact. Put a strong-willed woman in this wretched situation, and she will force a way
out of it for herself by a crime, like Catherine II., whom men nevertheless style “the Great.” But these women are not
all seated upon thrones, they are for the most part doomed to domestic unhappiness none the less terrible because
obscure.

Those who seek consolation in this present world for their woes often effect nothing but a change of ills if they
remain faithful to their duties; or they commit a sin if they break the laws for their pleasure. All these reflections
are applicable to Julie’s domestic life.

Before the fall of Napoleon nobody was jealous of d’Aiglemont. He was one colonel among many, an efficient orderly
staff-officer, as good a man as you could find for a dangerous mission, as unfit as well could be for an important
command. D’Aiglemont was looked upon as a dashing soldier such as the Emperor liked, the kind of man whom his mess
usually calls “a good fellow.” The Restoration gave him back his title of Marquis, and did not find him ungrateful; he
followed the Bourbons into exile at Ghent, a piece of logical loyalty which falsified the horoscope drawn for him by
his late father-inlaw, who predicted that Victor would remain a colonel all his life. After the Hundred Days he
received the appointment of Lieutenant–General, and for the second time became a marquis; but it was M. d’Aiglemont’s
ambition to be a peer of France. He adopted, therefore, the maxims and the politics of the Conservateur,
cloaked himself in dissimulation which hid nothing (there being nothing to hide), cultivated gravity of countenance and
the art of asking questions and saying little, and was taken for a man of profound wisdom. Nothing drew him from his
intrenchments behind the forms of politeness; he laid in a provision of formulas, and made lavish use of his stock of
the catch-words coined at need in Paris to give fools the small change for the ore of great ideas and events. Among men
of the world he was reputed a man of taste and discernment; and as a bigoted upholder of aristocratic opinions he was
held up for a noble character. If by chance he slipped now and again into his old light-heartedness or levity, others
were ready to discover an undercurrent of diplomatic intention beneath his inanity and silliness. “Oh! he only says
exactly as much as he means to say,” thought these excellent people.

So d’Aiglemont’s defects and good qualities stood him alike in good stead. He did nothing to forfeit a high military
reputation gained by his dashing courage, for he had never been a commander-inchief. Great thoughts surely were
engraven upon that manly aristocratic countenance, which imposed upon every one but his own wife. And when everybody
else believed in the Marquis d’Aiglemont’s imaginary talents, the Marquis persuaded himself before he had done that he
was one of the most remarkable men at Court, where, thanks to his purely external qualifications, he was in favor and
taken at his own valuation.

At home, however, M. d’Aiglemont was modest. Instinctively he felt that his wife, young though she was, was his
superior; and out of this involuntary respect there grew an occult power which the Marquise was obliged to wield in
spite of all her efforts to shake off the burden. She became her husband’s adviser, the director of his actions and his
fortunes. It was an unnatural position; she felt it as something of a humiliation, a source of pain to be buried in the
depths of her heart. From the first her delicately feminine instinct told her that it is a far better thing to obey a
man of talent than to lead a fool; and that a young wife compelled to act and think like a man is neither man nor
woman, but a being who lays aside all the charms of her womanhood along with its misfortunes, yet acquires none of the
privileges which our laws give to the stronger sex. Beneath the surface her life was a bitter mockery. Was she not
compelled to protect her protector, to worship a hollow idol, a poor creature who flung her the love of a selfish
husband as the wages of her continual self-sacrifice; who saw nothing in her but the woman; and who either did not
think it worth while, or (wrong quite as deep) did not think at all of troubling himself about her pleasures, of
inquiring into the cause of her low spirits and dwindling health? And the Marquis, like most men who chafe under a
wife’s superiority, saved his self-love by arguing from Julie’s physical feebleness a corresponding lack of mental
power, for which he was pleased to pity her; and he would cry out upon fate which had given him a sickly girl for a
wife. The executioner posed, in fact, as the victim.

All the burdens of this dreary lot fell upon the Marquise, who still must smile upon her foolish lord, and deck a
house of mourning with flowers, and make a parade of happiness in a countenance wan with secret torture. And with this
sense of responsibility for the honor of both, with the magnificent immolation of self, the young Marquise
unconsciously acquired a wifely dignity, a consciousness of virtue which became her safeguard amid many dangers.

Perhaps, if her heart were sounded to the very depths, this intimate closely hidden wretchedness, following upon her
unthinking, girlish first love, had roused in her an abhorrence of passion; possibly she had no conception of its
rapture, nor of the forbidden but frenzied bliss for which some women will renounce all the laws of prudence and the
principles of conduct upon which society is based. She put from her like a dream the thought of bliss and tender
harmony of love promised by Mme. de Listomere–Landon’s mature experience, and waited resignedly for the end of her
troubles with a hope that she might die young.

Her health had declined daily since her return from Touraine; her life seemed to be measured to her in suffering;
yet her ill-health was graceful, her malady seemed little more than languor, and might well be taken by careless eyes
for a fine lady’s whim of invalidism.

Her doctors had condemned her to keep to the sofa, and there among her flowers lay the Marquise, fading as they
faded. She was not strong enough to walk, nor to bear the open air, and only went out in a closed carriage. Yet with
all the marvels of modern luxury and invention about her, she looked more like an indolent queen than an invalid. A few
of her friends, half in love perhaps with her sad plight and her fragile look, sure of finding her at home, and
speculating no doubt upon her future restoration to health, would come to bring her the news of the day, and kept her
informed of the thousand and one small events which fill life in Paris with variety. Her melancholy, deep and real
though it was was still the melancholy of a woman rich in many ways. The Marquise d’Aiglemont was like a flower, with a
dark insect gnawing at its root.

Occasionally she went into society, not to please herself, but in obedience to the exigencies of the position which
her husband aspired to take. In society her beautiful voice and the perfection of her singing could always gain the
social success so gratifying to a young woman; but what was social success to her, who drew nothing from it for her
heart or her hopes? Her husband did not care for music. And, moreover, she seldom felt at her ease in salons, where her
beauty attracted homage not wholly disinterested. Her position excited a sort of cruel compassion, a morbid curiosity.
She was suffering from an inflammatory complaint not infrequently fatal, for which our nosology as yet has found no
name, a complaint spoken of among women in confidential whispers. In spite of the silence in which her life was spent,
the cause of her ill-health was no secret. She was still but a girl in spite of her marriage; the slightest glance
threw her into confusion. In her endeavor not to blush, she was always laughing, always apparently in high spirits; she
would never admit that she was not perfectly well, and anticipated questions as to her health by shame-stricken
subterfuges.

In 1817, however, an event took place which did much to alleviate Julie’s hitherto deplorable existence. A daughter
was born to her, and she determined to nurse her child herself. For two years motherhood, its all-absorbing
multiplicity of cares and anxious joys, made life less hard for her. She and her husband lived necessarily apart. Her
physicians predicted improved health, but the Marquise herself put no faith in these auguries based on theory. Perhaps,
like many a one for whom life has lost its sweetness, she looked forward to death as a happy termination of the
drama.

But with the beginning of the year 1819 life grew harder than ever. Even while she congratulated herself upon the
negative happiness which she had contrived to win, she caught a terrifying glimpse of yawning depths below it. She had
passed by degrees out of her husband’s life. Her fine tact and her prudence told her that misfortune must come, and
that not singly, of this cooling of an affection already lukewarm and wholly selfish. Sure though she was of her
ascendency over Victor, and certain as she felt of his unalterable esteem, she dreaded the influence of unbridled
passions upon a head so empty, so full of rash self-conceit.

Julie’s friends often found her absorbed in prolonged musings; the less clairvoyant among them would jestingly ask
her what she was thinking about, as if a young wife would think of nothing but frivolity, as if there were not almost
always a depth of seriousness in a mother’s thoughts. Unhappiness, like great happiness, induces dreaming. Sometimes as
Julie played with her little Helene, she would gaze darkly at her, giving no reply to the childish questions in which a
mother delights, questioning the present and the future as to the destiny of this little one. Then some sudden
recollection would bring back the scene of the review at the Tuileries and fill her eyes with tears. Her father’s
prophetic warnings rang in her ears, and conscience reproached her that she had not recognized its wisdom. Her troubles
had all come of her own wayward folly, and often she knew not which among so many were the hardest to bear. The sweet
treasures of her soul were unheeded, and not only so, she could never succeed in making her husband understand her,
even in the commonest everyday things. Just as the power to love developed and grew strong and active, a legitimate
channel for the affections of her nature was denied her, and wedded love was extinguished in grave physical and mental
sufferings. Add to this that she now felt for her husband that pity closely bordering upon contempt, which withers all
affection at last. Even if she had not learned from conversations with some of her friends, from examples in life, from
sundry occurrences in the great world, that love can bring ineffable bliss, her own wounds would have taught her to
divine the pure and deep happiness which binds two kindred souls each to each.

In the picture which her memory traced of the past, Arthur’s frank face stood out daily nobler and purer; it was but
a flash, for upon that recollection she dared not dwell. The young Englishman’s shy, silent love for her was the one
event since her marriage which had left a lingering sweetness in her darkened and lonely heart. It may be that all the
blighted hopes, all the frustrated longings which gradually clouded Julie’s mind, gathered, by a not unnatural trick of
imagination, about this man — whose manners, sentiments, and character seemed to have so much in common with her own.
This idea still presented itself to her mind fitfully and vaguely, like a dream; yet from that dream, which always
ended in a sigh, Julie awoke to greater wretchedness, to keener consciousness of the latent anguish brooding beneath
her imaginary bliss.

Occasionally her self-pity took wilder and more daring flights. She determined to have happiness at any cost; but
still more often she lay a helpless victim of an indescribable numbing stupor, the words she heard had no meaning to
her, or the thoughts which arose in her mind were so vague and indistinct that she could not find language to express
them. Balked of the wishes of her heart, realities jarred harshly upon her girlish dreams of life, but she was obliged
to devour her tears. To whom could she make complaint? Of whom be understood? She possessed, moreover, that highest
degree of woman’s sensitive pride, the exquisite delicacy of feeling which silences useless complainings and declines
to use an advantage to gain a triumph which can only humiliate both victor and vanquished.

Julie tried to endow M. d’Aiglemont with her own abilities and virtues, flattering herself that thus she might enjoy
the happiness lacking in her lot. All her woman’s ingenuity and tack was employed in making the best of the situation;
pure waste of pains unsuspected by him, whom she thus strengthened in his despotism. There were moments when misery
became an intoxication, expelling all ideas, all self-control; but, fortunately, sincere piety always brought her back
to one supreme hope; she found a refuge in the belief in a future life, a wonderful thought which enabled her to take
up her painful task afresh. No elation of victory followed those terrible inward battles and throes of anguish; no one
knew of those long hours of sadness; her haggard glances met no response from human eyes, and during the brief moments
snatched by chance for weeping, her bitter tears fell unheeded and in solitude.

One evening in January 1820, the Marquise became aware of the full gravity of the crisis, gradually brought on by
force of circumstances. When a husband and wife know each other thoroughly, and their relation has long been a matter
of use and wont, when the wife has learned to interpret every slightest sign, when her quick insight discerns thoughts
and facts which her husband keeps from her, a chance word, or a remark so carelessly let fall in the first instance,
seems, upon subsequent reflection, like the swift breaking out of light. A wife not seldom suddenly awakes upon the
brink of a precipice or in the depths of the abyss; and thus it was with the Marquise. She was feeling glad to have
been left to herself for some days, when the real reason of her solitude flashed upon her. Her husband, whether fickle
and tired of her, or generous and full of pity for her, was hers no longer.

In the moment of that discovery she forgot herself, her sacrifices, all that she had passed through, she remembered
only that she was a mother. Looking forward, she thought of her daughter’s fortune, of the future welfare of the one
creature through whom some gleams of happiness came to her, of her Helene, the only possession which bound her to
life.

Then Julie wished to live to save her child from a stepmother’s terrible thraldom, which might crush her darling’s
life. Upon this new vision of threatened possibilities followed one of those paroxysms of thought at fever-heat which
consume whole years of life.

Henceforward husband and wife were doomed to be separated by a whole world of thought, and all the weight of that
world she must bear alone. Hitherto she had felt sure that Victor loved her, in so far as he could be said to love; she
had been the slave of pleasures which she did not share; today the satisfaction of knowing that she purchased his
contentment with her tears was hers no longer. She was alone in the world, nothing was left to her now but a choice of
evils. In the calm stillness of the night her despondency drained her of all her strength. She rose from her sofa
beside the dying fire, and stood in the lamplight gazing, dry-eyed, at her child, when M. d’Aiglemont came in. He was
in high spirits. Julie called to him to admire Helene as she lay asleep, but he met his wife’s enthusiasm with a
commonplace:

“All children are nice at that age.”

He closed the curtains about the cot after a careless kiss on the child’s forehead. Then he turned his eyes on
Julie, took her hand and drew her to sit beside him on the sofa, where she had been sitting with such dark thoughts
surging up in her mind.

“You are looking very handsome to-night, Mme. d’Aiglemont,” he exclaimed, with the gaiety intolerable to the
Marquise, who knew its emptiness so well.

“Where have you spent the evening?” she asked, with a pretence of complete indifference.

“At Mme. de Serizy’s.”

He had taken up a fire-screen, and was looking intently at the gauze. He had not noticed the traces of tears on his
wife’s face. Julie shuddered. Words could not express the overflowing torrent of thoughts which must be forced down
into inner depths.

“Mme. de Serizy is giving a concert on Monday, and is dying for you to go. You have not been anywhere for some time
past, and that is enough to set her longing to see you at her house. She is a good-natured woman, and very fond of you.
I should be glad if you would go; I all but promised that you should ——”

“I will go.”

There was something so penetrating, so significant in the tones of Julie’s voice, in her accent, in the glance that
went with the words, that Victor, startled out of his indifference, stared at his wife in astonishment.

That was all, Julie had guessed that it was Mme. de Serizy who had stolen her husband’s heart from her. Her brooding
despair benumbed her. She appeared to be deeply interested in the fire. Victor meanwhile still played with the
fire-screen. He looked bored, like a man who has enjoyed himself elsewhere, and brought home the consequent lassitude.
He yawned once or twice, then he took up a candle in one hand, and with the other languidly sought his wife’s neck for
the usual embrace; but Julie stooped and received the good-night kiss upon her forehead; the formal, loveless grimace
seemed hateful to her at that moment.

As soon as the door closed upon Victor, his wife sank into a seat. Her limbs tottered beneath her, she burst into
tears. None but those who have endured the torture of some such scene can fully understand the anguish that it means,
or divine the horror of the long-drawn tragedy arising out of it.

Those simple, foolish words, the silence that followed between the husband and wife, the Marquis’ gesture and
expression, the way in which he sat before the fire, his attitude as he made that futile attempt to put a kiss on his
wife’s throat — all these things made up a dark hour for Julie, and the catastrophe of the drama of her sad and lonely
life. In her madness she knelt down before the sofa, burying her face in it to shut out everything from sight, and
prayed to Heaven, putting a new significance into the words of the evening prayer, till it became a cry from the depths
of her own soul, which would have gone to her husband’s heart if he had heard it.

The following week she spent in deep thought for her future, utterly overwhelmed by this new trouble. She made a
study of it, trying to discover a way to regain her ascendency over the Marquis, scheming how to live long enough to
watch over her daughter’s happiness, yet to live true to her own heart. Then she made up her mind. She would struggle
with her rival. She would shine once more in society. She would feign the love which she could no longer feel, she
would captivate her husband’s fancy; and when she had lured him into her power, she would coquet with him like a
capricious mistress who takes delight in tormenting a lover. This hateful strategy was the only possible way out of her
troubles. In this way she would become mistress of the situation; she would prescribe her own sufferings at her good
pleasure, and reduce them by enslaving her husband, and bringing him under a tyrannous yoke. She felt not the slightest
remorse for the hard life which he should lead. At a bound she reached cold, calculating indifference — for her
daughter’s sake. She had gained a sudden insight into the treacherous, lying arts of degraded women; the wiles of
coquetry, the revolting cunning which arouses such profound hatred in men at the mere suspicion of innate corruption in
a woman.

Julie’s feminine vanity, her interests, and a vague desire to inflict punishment, all wrought unconsciously with the
mother’s love within her to force her into a path where new sufferings awaited her. But her nature was too noble, her
mind too fastidious, and, above all things, too open, to be the accomplice of these frauds for very long. Accustomed as
she was to self-scrutiny, at the first step in vice — for vice it was — the cry of conscience must inevitably drown the
clamor of the passions and of selfishness. Indeed, in a young wife whose heart is still pure, whose love has never been
mated, the very sentiment of motherhood is overpowered by modesty. Modesty; is not all womanhood summed up in that? But
just now Julie would not see any danger, anything wrong, in her life.

She went to Mme. de Serizy’s concert. Her rival had expected to see a pallid, drooping woman. The Marquise wore
rouge, and appeared in all the splendor of a toilet which enhanced her beauty.

Mme. de Serizy was one of those women who claim to exercise a sort of sway over fashions and society in Paris; she
issued her decrees, saw them received in her own circle, and it seemed to her that all the world obeyed them. She
aspired to epigram, she set up for an authority in matters of taste. Literature, politics, men and women, all alike
were submitted to her censorship, and the lady herself appeared to defy the censorship of others. Her house was in
every respect a model of good taste.

Julie triumphed over the Countess in her own salon, filled as it was with beautiful women and women of fashion.
Julie’s liveliness and sparkling wit gathered all the most distinguished men in the rooms about her. Her costume was
faultless, for the despair of the women, who one and all envied her the fashion of her dress, and attributed the
moulded outline of her bodice to the genius of some unknown dressmaker, for women would rather believe in miracles
worked by the science of chiffons than in the grace and perfection of the form beneath.

When Julie went to the piano to sing Desdemona’s song, the men in the rooms flocked about her to hear the celebrated
voice so long mute, and there was a deep silence. The Marquise saw the heads clustered thickly in the doorways, saw all
eyes turned upon her, and a sharp thrill of excitement quivered through her. She looked for her husband, gave him a
coquettish side-glance, and it pleased her to see that his vanity was gratified to no small degree. In the joy of
triumph she sang the first part of Al piu salice. Her audience was enraptured. Never had Malibran nor Pasta
sung with expression and intonation so perfect. But at the beginning of the second part she glanced over the glistening
groups and saw — Arthur. He never took his eyes from her face. A quick shudder thrilled through her, and her voice
faltered. Up hurried Mme. de Serizy from her place.

“What is it, dear? Oh! poor little thing! she is in such weak health; I was so afraid when I saw her begin a piece
so far beyond her strength.”

The song was interrupted. Julie was vexed. She had not courage to sing any longer, and submitted to her rival’s
treacherous sympathy. There was a whisper among the women. The incident led to discussions; they guessed that the
struggle had begun between the Marquise and Mme. de Serizy, and their tongues did not spare the latter.

Julie’s strange, perturbing presentiments were suddenly realized. Through her preoccupation with Arthur she had
loved to imagine that with that gentle, refined face he must remain faithful to his first love. There were times when
she felt proud that this ideal, pure, and passionate young love should have been hers; the passion of the young lover
whose thoughts are all for her to whom he dedicates every moment of his life, who blushes as a woman blushes, thinks as
a woman might think, forgetting ambition, fame, and fortune in devotion to his love, — she need never fear a rival. All
these things she had fondly and idly dreamed of Arthur; now all at once it seemed to her that her dream had come true.
In the young Englishman’s half-feminine face she read the same deep thoughts, the same pensive melancholy, the same
passive acquiescence in a painful lot, and an endurance like her own. She saw herself in him. Trouble and sadness are
the most eloquent of love’s interpreters, and response is marvelously swift between two suffering creatures, for in
them the powers of intuition and of assimilation of facts and ideas are well-nigh unerring and perfect. So with the
violence of the shock the Marquise’s eyes were opened to the whole extent of the future danger. She was only too glad
to find a pretext for her nervousness in her chronic ill-health, and willingly submitted to be overwhelmed by Mme. de
Serizy’s insidious compassion.

That incident of the song caused talk and discussion which differed with the various groups. Some pitied Julie’s
fate, and regretted that such a remarkable woman was lost to society; others fell to wondering what the cause of her
ill-health and seclusion could be.

“Well, now, my dear Ronquerolles,” said the Marquis, addressing Mme. de Serizy’s brother, “you used to envy me my
good fortune, and you used to blame me for my infidelities. Pshaw, you would not find much to envy in my lot, if, like
me, you had a pretty wife so fragile that for the past two years you might not so much as kiss her hand for fear of
damaging her. Do not you encumber yourself with one of those fragile ornaments, only fit to put in a glass case, so
brittle and so costly that you are always obliged to be careful of them. They tell me that you are afraid of snow or
wet for that fine horse of yours; how often do you ride him? That is just my own case. It is true that my wife gives me
no ground for jealousy, but my marriage is purely ornamental business; if you think that I am a married man, you are
grossly mistaken. So there is some excuse for my unfaithfulness. I should dearly like to know what you gentlemen who
laugh at me would do in my place. Not many men would be so considerate as I am. I am sure,” (here he lowered his voice)
“that Mme. d’Aiglemont suspects nothing. And then, of course, I have no right to complain at all; I am very well off.
Only there is nothing more trying for a man who feels things than the sight of suffering in a poor creature to whom you
are attached ——”

“You must have a very sensitive nature, then,” said M. de Ronquerolles, “for you are not often at home.”

Laughter followed on the friendly epigram; but Arthur, who made one of the group, maintained a frigid
imperturbability in his quality of an English gentleman who takes gravity for the very basis of his being.
D’Aiglemont’s eccentric confidence, no doubt, had kindled some kind of hope in Arthur, for he stood patiently awaiting
an opportunity of a word with the Marquis. He had not to wait long.

“My Lord Marquis,” he said, “I am unspeakably pained to see the state of Mme. d’Aiglemont’s health. I do not think
that you would talk jestingly about it if you knew that unless she adopts a certain course of treatment she must die
miserably. If I use this language to you, it is because I am in a manner justified in using it, for I am quite certain
that I can save Mme. d’Aiglemont’s life and restore her to health and happiness. It is odd, no doubt, that a man of my
rank should be a physician, yet nevertheless chance determined that I should study medicine. I find life dull enough
here,” he continued, affecting a cold selfishness to gain his ends, “it makes no difference to me whether I spend my
time and travel for the benefit of a suffering fellow-creature, or waste it in Paris on some nonsense or other. It is
very, very seldom that a cure is completed in these complaints, for they require constant care, time, and patience,
and, above all things, money. Travel is needed, and a punctilious following out of prescriptions, by no means
unpleasant, and varied daily. Two gentlemen” (laying a stress on the word in its English sense) “can
understand each other. I give you warning that if you accept my proposal, you shall be a judge of my conduct at every
moment. I will do nothing without consulting you, without your superintendence, and I will answer for the success of my
method if you will consent to follow it. Yes, unless you wish to be Mme. d’Aiglemont’s husband no longer, and that
before long,” he added in the Marquis’ ear.

The Marquis laughed. “One thing is certain — that only an Englishman could make me such an extraordinary proposal,”
he said. “Permit me to leave it unaccepted and unrejected. I will think it over; and my wife must be consulted first in
any case.”

Julie had returned to the piano. This time she sang a song from Semiramide, Son regina, son guerriera, and
the whole room applauded, a stifled outburst of wellbred acclamation which proved that the Faubourg Saint–Germain had
been roused to enthusiasm by her singing.

The evening was over. D’Aiglemont brought his wife home, and Julie saw with uneasy satisfaction that her first
attempt had at once been successful. Her husband had been roused out of indifference by the part which she had played,
and now he meant to honor her with such a passing fancy as he might bestow upon some opera nymph. It amused Julie that
she, a virtuous married woman, should be treated thus. She tried to play with her power, but at the outset her kindness
broke down once more, and she received the most terrible of all the lessons held in store for her by fate.

Between two and three o’clock in the morning Julie sat up, sombre and moody, beside her sleeping husband, in the
room dimly lighted by the flickering lamp. Deep silence prevailed. Her agony of remorse had lasted near an hour; how
bitter her tears had been none perhaps can realize save women who have known such an experience as hers. Only such
natures as Julie’s can feel her loathing for a calculated caress, the horror of a loveless kiss, of the heart’s
apostasy followed by dolorous prostitution. She despised herself; she cursed marriage. She could have longed for death;
perhaps if it had not been for a cry from her child, she would have sprung from the window and dashed herself upon the
pavement. M. d’Aiglemont slept on peacefully at her side; his wife’s hot dropping tears did not waken him.

But next morning Julie could be gay. She made a great effort to look happy, to hide, not her melancholy, as
heretofore, but an insuperable loathing. From that day she no longer regarded herself as a blameless wife. Had she not
been false to herself? Why should she not play a double part in the future, and display astounding depths of cunning in
deceiving her husband? In her there lay a hitherto undiscovered latent depravity, lacking only opportunity, and her
marriage was the cause.

Even now she had asked herself why she should struggle with love, when, with her heart and her whole nature in
revolt, she gave herself to the husband whom she loved no longer. Perhaps, who knows? some piece of fallacious
reasoning, some bit of special pleading, lies at the root of all sins, of all crimes. How shall society exist unless
every individual of which it is composed will make the necessary sacrifices of inclination demanded by its laws? If you
accept the benefits of civilized society, do you not by implication engage to observe the conditions, the conditions of
its very existence? And yet, starving wretches, compelled to respect the laws of property, are not less to be pitied
than women whose natural instincts and sensitiveness are turned to so many avenues of pain.

A few days after that scene of which the secret lay buried in the midnight couch, d’Aiglemont introduced Lord
Grenville. Julie gave the guest a stiffly polite reception, which did credit to her powers of dissimulation. Resolutely
she silenced her heart, veiled her eyes, steadied her voice, and she kept her future in her own hands. Then, when by
these devices, this innate woman-craft, as it may be called, she had discovered the full extent of the love which she
inspired, Mme. d’Aiglemont welcomed the hope of a speedy cure, and no longer opposed her husband, who pressed her to
accept the young doctor’s offer. Yet she declined to trust herself with Lord Grenville until after some further study
of his words and manner, she could feel certain that he had sufficient generosity to endure his pain in silence. She
had absolute power over him, and she had begun to abuse that power already. Was she not a woman?

Montcontour is an old manor-house build upon the sandy cliffs above the Loire, not far from the bridge where Julie’s
journey was interrupted in 1814. It is a picturesque, white chateau, with turrets covered with fine stone carving like
Mechlin lace; a chateau such as you often see in Touraine, spick and span, ivy clad, standing among its groves of
mulberry trees and vineyards, with its hollow walks, its stone balustrades, and cellars mined in the rock escarpments
mirrored in the Loire. The roofs of Montcontour gleam in the sun; the whole land glows in the burning heat. Traces of
the romantic charm of Spain and the south hover about the enchanting spot. The breeze brings the scent of bell flowers
and golden broom, the air is soft, all about you lies a sunny land, a land which casts its dreamy spell over your soul,
a land of languor and of soft desire, a fair, sweet-scented country, where pain is lulled to sleep and passion wakes.
No heart is cold for long beneath its clear sky, beside its sparkling waters. One ambition dies after another, and you
sink into serene content and repose, as the sun sinks at the end of the day swathed about with purple and azure.

One warm August evening in 1821 two people were climbing the paths cut in the crags above the chateau, doubtless for
the sake of the view from the heights above. The two were Julie and Lord Grenville, but this Julie seemed to be a new
creature. The unmistakable color of health glowed in her face. Overflowing vitality had brought a light into her eyes,
which sparkled through a moist film with that liquid brightness which gives such irresistible charm to the eyes of
children. She was radiant with smiles; she felt the joy of living and all the possibilities of life. From the very way
in which she lifted her little feet, it was easy to see that no suffering trammeled her lightest movements; there was
no heaviness nor languor in her eyes, her voice, as heretofore. Under the white silk sunshade which screened her from
the hot sunlight, she looked like some young bride beneath her veil, or a maiden waiting to yield to the magical
enchantments of Love.

Arthur led her with a lover’s care, helping her up the pathway as if she had been a child, finding the smoothest
ways, avoiding the stones for her, bidding her see glimpses of distance, or some flower beside the path, always with
the unfailing goodness, the same delicate design in all that he did; the intuitive sense of this woman’s wellbeing
seemed to be innate in him, and as much, nay, perhaps more, a part of his being as the pulse of his own life.

The patient and her doctor went step for step. There was nothing strange for them in a sympathy which seemed to have
existed since the day when they first walked together. One will swayed them both; they stopped as their senses received
the same impression; every word and every glance told of the same thought in either mind. They had climbed up through
the vineyards, and now they turned to sit on one of the long white stones, quarried out of the caves in the hillside;
but Julie stood awhile gazing out over the landscape.

“What a beautiful country!” she cried. “Let us put up a tent and live here. Victor, Victor, do come up here!”

M. d’Aiglemont answered by a halloo from below. He did not, however, hurry himself, merely giving his wife a glance
from time to time when the windings of the path gave him a glimpse of her. Julie breathed the air with delight. She
looked up at Arthur, giving him one of those subtle glances in which a clever woman can put the whole of her
thought.

“Ah, I should like to live here always,” she said. “Would it be possible to tire of this beautiful valley? — What is
the picturesque river called, do you know?”

“That is the Cise.”

“The Cise,” she repeated. “And all this country below, before us?”

“Those are the low hills above the Cher.”

“And away to the right? Ah, that is Tours. Only see how fine the cathedral towers look in the distance.”

She was silent, and let fall the hand which she had stretched out towards the view upon Arthur’s. Both admired the
wide landscape made up of so much blended beauty. Neither of them spoke. The murmuring voice of the river, the pure
air, and the cloudless heaven were all in tune with their thronging thoughts and their youth and the love in their
hearts.

“Oh! mon Dieu, how I love this country!” Julie continued, with growing and ingenuous enthusiasm. “You lived
here for a long while, did you not?” she added after a pause.

A thrill ran through Lord Grenville at her words.

“It was down there,” he said, in a melancholy voice, indicating as he spoke a cluster of walnut trees by the
roadside, “that I, a prisoner, saw you for the first time.”

“Yes, but even at that time I felt very sad. This country looked wild to me then, but now ——” She broke off, and
Lord Grenville did not dare to look at her.

“All this pleasure I owe to you,” Julie began at last, after a long silence. “Only the living can feel the joy of
life, and until now have I not been dead to it all? You have given me more than health, you have made me feel all its
worth —”

Women have an inimitable talent for giving utterance to strong feelings in colorless words; a woman’s eloquence lies
in tone and gesture, manner and glance. Lord Grenville hid his face in his hands, for his tears filled his eyes. This
was Julie’s first word of thanks since they left Paris a year ago.

For a whole year he had watched over the Marquise, putting his whole self into the task. D’Aiglemont seconding him,
he had taken her first to Aix, then to la Rochelle, to be near the sea. From moment to moment he had watched the
changes worked in Julie’s shattered constitution by his wise and simple prescriptions. He had cultivated her health as
an enthusiastic gardener might cultivate a rare flower. Yet, to all appearance, the Marquise had quietly accepted
Arthur’s skill and care with the egoism of a spoiled Parisienne, or like a courtesan who has no idea of the cost of
things, nor of the worth of a man, and judges of both by their comparative usefulness to her.

The influence of places upon us is a fact worth remarking. If melancholy comes over us by the margin of a great
water, another indelible law of our nature so orders it that the mountains exercise a purifying influence upon our
feelings, and among the hills passion gains in depth by all that it apparently loses in vivacity. Perhaps it was the
light of the wide country by the Loire, the height of the fair sloping hillside on which the lovers sat, that induced
the calm bliss of the moment when the whole extent of the passion that lies beneath a few insignificant-sounding words
is divined for the first time with a delicious sense of happiness.

Julie had scarcely spoken the words which had moved Lord Grenville so deeply, when a caressing breeze ruffled the
treetops and filled the air with coolness from the river; a few clouds crossed the sky, and the soft cloud-shadows
brought out all the beauty of the fair land below.

Julie turned away her head, lest Arthur should see the tears which she succeeded in repressing; his emotion had
spread at once to her. She dried her eyes, but she dared not raise them lest he should read the excess of joy in a
glance. Her woman’s instinct told her that during this hour of danger she must hide her love in the depths of her
heart. Yet silence might prove equally dangerous, and Julie saw that Lord Grenville was unable to utter a word. She
went on, therefore, in a gentle voice:

“You are touched by what I have said. Perhaps such a quick outburst of feeling is the way in which a gracious and
kind nature like yours reverses a mistaken judgment. You must have thought me ungrateful when I was cold and reserved,
or cynical and hard, all through the journey which, fortunately, is very near its end. I should not have been worthy of
your care if I had been unable to appreciate it. I have forgotten nothing. Alas! I shall forget nothing, not the
anxious way in which you watched over me as a mother watches over her child, nor, and above all else, the noble
confidence of our life as brother and sister, the delicacy of your conduct — winning charms, against which we women are
defenceless. My lord, it is out of my power to make you a return ——”

At these words Julie hastily moved further away, and Lord Grenville made no attempt to detain her. She went to a
rock not far away, and there sat motionless. What either felt remained a secret known to each alone; doubtless they
wept in silence. The singing of the birds about them, so blithe, so overflowing with tenderness at sunset time, could
only increase the storm of passion which had driven them apart. Nature took up their story for them, and found a
language for the love of which they did not dare to speak.

“And now, my lord,” said Julie, and she came and stood before Arthur with a great dignity, which allowed her to take
his hand in hers. “I am going to ask you to hallow and purify the life which you have given back to me. Here, we will
part. I know,” she added, as she saw how white his face grew, “I know that I am repaying you for your devotion by
requiring of you a sacrifice even greater than any which you have hitherto made for me, sacrifices so great that they
should receive some better recompense than this. . . . But it must be . . . You must not stay in
France. By laying this command upon you, do I not give you rights which shall be held sacred?” she added, holding his
hand against her beating heart.

“Yes,” said Arthur, and he rose.

He looked in the direction of d’Aiglemont, who appeared on the opposite side of one of the hollow walks with the
child in his arms. He had scrambled up on the balustrade by the chateau that little Helene might jump down.

“Julie, I will not say a word of my love; we understand each other too well. Deeply and carefully though I have
hidden the pleasures of my heart, you have shared them all, I feel it, I know it, I see it. And now, at this moment, as
I receive this delicious proof of the constant sympathy of our hearts, I must go. . . . Cunning schemes for
getting rid of him have crossed my mind too often; the temptation might be irresistible if I stayed with you.”

“I had the same thought,” she said, a look of pained surprise in her troubled face.

Yet in her tone and involuntary shudder there was such virtue, such certainty of herself, won in many a hard-fought
battle with a love that spoke in Julie’s tones and involuntary gestures, that Lord Grenville stood thrilled with
admiration of her. The mere shadow of a crime had been dispelled from that clear conscience. The religious sentiment
enthroned on the fair forehead could not but drive away the evil thoughts that arise unbidden, engendered by our
imperfect nature, thoughts which make us aware of the grandeur and the perils of human destiny.

“And then,” she said, “I should have drawn down your scorn upon me, and — I should have been saved,” she added, and
her eyes fell. “To be lowered in your eyes, what is that but death?”

For a moment the two heroic lovers were silent, choking down their sorrow. Good or ill, it seemed that their
thoughts were loyally one, and the joys in the depths of their heart were no more experiences apart than the pain which
they strove most anxiously to hide.

“I have no right to complain,” she said after a while, “my misery is of my own making,” and she raised her
tear-filled eyes to the sky.

“Perhaps you don’t remember it, but that is the place where we met each other for the first time,” shouted the
General from below, and he waved his hand towards the distance. “There, down yonder, near those poplars!”

The Englishman nodded abruptly by way of answer.

“So I was bound to die young and to know no happiness,” Julie continued. “Yes, do not think that I live. Sorrow is
just as fatal as the dreadful disease which you have cured. I do not think that I am to blame. No. My love is stronger
than I am, and eternal; but all unconsciously it grew in me; and I will not be guilty through my love. Nevertheless,
though I shall be faithful to my conscience as a wife, to my duties as a mother, I will be no less faithful to the
instincts of my heart. Hear me,” she cried in an unsteady voice, “henceforth I belong to him no longer.”

By a gesture, dreadful to see in its undisguised loathing she indicated her husband.

“The social code demands that I shall make his existence happy,” she continued. “I will obey, I will be his servant,
my devotion to him shall be boundless; but from today I am a widow. I will neither be a prostitute in my own eyes nor
in those of the world. If I do not belong to M. d’Aiglemont, I will never belong to another. You shall have nothing,
nothing save this which you have wrung from me. This is the doom which I have passed upon myself,” she said, looking
proudly at him. “And now, know this — if you give way to a single criminal thought, M. d’Aiglemont’s widow will enter a
convent in Spain or Italy. By an evil chance we have spoken of our love; perhaps that confession was bound to come; but
our hearts must never vibrate again like this. To-morrow you will receive a letter from England, and we shall part, and
never see each other again.”

The effort had exhausted all Julie’s strength. She felt her knees trembling, and a feeling of deathly cold came over
her. Obeying a woman’s instinct, she sat down, lest she should sink into Arthur’s arms.

“Julie!” cried Lord Grenville.

The sharp cry rang through the air like a crack of thunder. Till then he could not speak; now, all the words which
the dumb lover could not utter gathered themselves in that heartrending appeal.

“Well, what is wrong with her?” asked the General, who had hurried up at that cry, and now suddenly confronted the
two.

“Nothing serious,” said Julie, with that wonderful self-possession which a woman’s quick-wittedness usually brings
to her aid when it is most called for. “The chill, damp air under the walnut tree made me feel quite faint just now,
and that must have alarmed this doctor of mine. Does he not look on me as a very nearly finished work of art? He was
startled, I suppose, by the idea of seeing it destroyed.” With ostentatious coolness she took Lord Grenville’s arm,
smiled at her husband, took a last look at the landscape, and went down the pathway, drawing her traveling companion
with her.

“This certainly is the grandest view that we have seen,” she said; “I shall never forget it. Just look, Victor, what
distance, what an expanse of country, and what variety in it! I have fallen in love with this landscape.”

Her laughter was almost hysterical, but to her husband it sounded natural. She sprang gaily down into the hollow
pathway and vanished.

“What?” she cried, when they had left M. d’Aiglemont far behind. “So soon? Is it so soon? Another moment, and we can
neither of us be ourselves; we shall never be ourselves again, our life is over, in short —”

“Let us go slowly,” said Lord Grenville, “the carriages are still some way off, and if we may put words into our
glances, our hearts may live a little longer.”

They went along the footpath by the river in the late evening light, almost in silence; such vague words as they
uttered, low as the murmur of the Loire, stirred their souls to the depths. Just as the sun sank, a last red gleam from
the sky fell over them; it was like a mournful symbol of their ill-starred love.

The General, much put out because the carriage was not at the spot where they had left it, followed and outstripped
the pair without interrupting their converse. Lord Grenville’s high minded and delicate behavior throughout the journey
had completely dispelled the Marquis’ suspicions. For some time past he had left his wife in freedom, reposing
confidence in the noble amateur’s Punic faith. Arthur and Julie walked on together in the close and painful communion
of two hearts laid waste.

So short a while ago as they climbed the cliffs at Montcontour, there had been a vague hope in either mind, an
uneasy joy for which they dared not account to themselves; but now as they came along the pathway by the river, they
pulled down the frail structure of imaginings, the child’s cardcastle, on which neither of them had dared to breathe.
That hope was over.

That very evening Lord Grenville left them. His last look at Julie made it miserably plain that since the moment
when sympathy revealed the full extent of a tyrannous passion, he did well to mistrust himself.

The next morning, M. d’Aiglemont and his wife took their places in the carriage without their traveling companion,
and were whirled swiftly along the road to Blois. The Marquise was constantly put in mind of the journey made in 1814,
when as yet she know nothing of love, and had been almost ready to curse it for its persistency. Countless forgotten
impressions were revived. The heart has its own memory. A woman who cannot recollect the most important great events
will recollect through a lifetime things which appealed to her feelings; and Julie d’Aiglemont found all the most
trifling details of that journey laid up in her mind. It was pleasant to her to recall its little incidents as they
occurred to her one by one; there were points in the road when she could even remember the thoughts that passed through
her mind when she saw them first.

Victor had fallen violently in love with his wife since she had recovered the freshness of her youth and all her
beauty, and now he pressed close to her side like a lover. Once he tried to put his arm round her, but she gently
disengaged herself, finding some excuse or other for evading the harmless caress. In a little while she shrank from the
close contact with Victor, the sensation of warmth communicated by their position. She tried to take the unoccupied
place opposite, but Victor gallantly resigned the back seat to her. For this attention she thanked him with a sigh,
whereupon he forgot himself, and the Don Juan of the garrison construed his wife’s melancholy to his own advantage, so
that at the end of the day she was compelled to speak with a firmness which impressed him.

“You have all but killed me, dear, once already, as you know,” said she. “If I were still an inexperienced girl, I
might begin to sacrifice myself afresh; but I am a mother, I have a daughter to bring up, and I owe as much to her as
to you. Let us resign ourselves to a misfortune which affects us both alike. You are the less to be pitied. Have you
not, as it is, found consolations which duty and the honor of both, and (stronger still) which Nature forbids to me?
Stay,” she added, “you carelessly left three letters from Mme. de Serizy in a drawer; here they are. My silence about
this matter should make it plain to you that in me you have a wife who has plenty of indulgence and does not exact from
you the sacrifices prescribed by the law. But I have thought enough to see that the roles of husband and wife are quite
different, and that the wife alone is predestined to misfortune. My virtue is based upon firmly fixed and definite
principles. I shall live blamelessly, but let me live.”

The Marquis was taken aback by a logic which women grasp with the clear insight of love, and overawed by a certain
dignity natural to them at such crises. Julie’s instinctive repugnance for all that jarred upon her love and the
instincts of her heart is one of the fairest qualities of woman, and springs perhaps from a natural virtue which
neither laws nor civilization can silence. And who shall dare to blame women? If a woman can silence the exclusive
sentiment which bids her “forsake all other” for the man whom she loves, what is she but a priest who has lost his
faith? If a rigid mind here and there condemns Julie for a sort of compromise between love and wifely duty, impassioned
souls will lay it to her charge as a crime. To be thus blamed by both sides shows one of two things very clearly — that
misery necessarily follows in the train of broken laws, or else that there are deplorable flaws in the institutions
upon which society in Europe is based.

Two years went by. M. and Mme. d’Aiglemont went their separate ways, leading their life in the world, meeting each
other more frequently abroad than at home, a refinement upon divorce, in which many a marriage in the great world is
apt to end.

One evening, strange to say, found husband and wife in their own drawing-room. Mme. d’Aiglemont had been dining at
home with a friend, and the General, who almost invariably dined in town, had not gone out for once.

“There is a pleasant time in store for you, Madame la Marquise,” said M. d’Aiglemont, setting his coffee
cup down upon the table. He looked at the guest, Mme. de Wimphen, and half-pettishly, half-mischievously added, “I am
starting off for several days’ sport with the Master of the Hounds. For a whole week, at any rate, you will be a widow
in good earnest; just what you wish for, I suppose. — Guillaume,” he said to the servant who entered, “tell them to put
the horses in.”

Mme. de Wimphen was the friend to whom Julie had begun the letter upon her marriage. The glances exchanged by the
two women said plainly that in her Julie had found an intimate friend, an indulgent and invaluable confidante. Mme. de
Wimphen’s marriage had been a very happy one. Perhaps it was her own happiness which secured her devotion to Julie’s
unhappy life, for under such circumstances, dissimilarity of destiny is nearly always a strong bond of union.

“Is the hunting season not over yet?” asked Julie, with an indifferent glance at her husband.

“The Master of the Hounds comes when and where he pleases, madame. We are going boar-hunting in the Royal
Forest.”

“Take care that no accident happens to you.”

“Accidents are usually unforeseen,” he said, smiling.

“The carriage is ready, my Lord Marquis,” said the servant.

“Madame, if I should fall a victim to the boar —” he continued, with a suppliant air.

“What does this mean?” inquired Mme. de Wimphen.

“Come, come,” said Mme. d’Aiglemont, turning to her husband; smiling at her friend as if to say, “You will soon
see.”

Julie held up her head; but as her husband came close to her, she swerved at the last, so that his kiss fell not on
her throat, but on the broad frill about it.

“You will be my witness before heaven now that I need a firman to obtain this little grace of her,” said the
Marquis, addressing Mme. de Wimphen. “This is how this wife of mine understands love. She has brought me to this pass,
by what trickery I am at a loss to know. . . . A pleasant time to you!” and he went.

“But your poor husband is really very good-natured,” cried Louisa de Wimphen, when the two women were alone
together. “He loves you.”

“Oh! not another syllable after that last word. The name I bear makes me shudder ——”

“Yes, but Victor obeys you implicitly,” said Louisa.

“His obedience is founded in part upon the great esteem which I have inspired in him. As far as outward things go, I
am a model wife. I make his house pleasant to him; I shut my eyes to his intrigues; I touch not a penny of his fortune.
He is free to squander the interest exactly as he pleases; I only stipulate that he shall not touch the principal. At
this price I have peace. He neither explains nor attempts to explain my life. But though my husband is guided by me,
that does not say that I have nothing to fear from his character. I am a bear leader who daily trembles lest the muzzle
should give way at last. If Victor once took it into his head that I had forfeited my right to his esteem, what would
happen next I dare not think; for he is violent, full of personal pride, and vain above all things. While his wits are
not keen enough to enable him to behave discreetly at a delicate crisis when his lowest passions are involved, his
character is weak, and he would very likely kill me provisionally even if he died of remorse next day. But there is no
fear of that fatal good fortune.”

A brief pause followed. Both women were thinking of the real cause of this state of affairs. Julie gave Louisa a
glance which revealed her thoughts.

“I have been cruelly obeyed,” she cried. “Yet I never forbade him to write to me. Oh! he has forgotten me,
and he is right. If his life had been spoiled, it would have been too tragical; one life is enough, is it not? Would
you believe it, dear; I read English newspapers simply to see his name in print. But he has not yet taken his seat in
the House of Lords.”

“That is the secret,” said the Marquise, with an involuntary gesture almost childlike in its simplicity. “Listen, I
take laudanum. That duchess in London suggested the idea; you know the story, Maturin made use of it in one of his
novels. My drops are very weak, but I sleep; I am only awake for seven hours in the day, and those house I spend with
my child.”

Louisa gazed into the fire. The full extent of her friend’s misery was opening out before her for the first time,
and she dared not look into her face.

“Keep my secret, Louisa,” said Julie, after a moment’s silence.

Just as she spoke the footman brought in a letter for the Marquise.

“Ah!” she cried, and her face grew white.

“I need not ask from whom it comes,” said Mme. de Wimphen, but the Marquise was reading the letter, and heeded
nothing else.

Mme. de Wimphen, watching her friend, saw strong feeling wrought to the highest pitch, ecstasy of the most dangerous
kind painted on Julie’s face in swift changing white and red. At length Julie flung the sheet into the fire.

Mme. de Wimphen did not dare to interrupt the words that followed, jerked-out sentences, measured by dreadful pauses
in between. After every break the deep notes of her voice sank lower and lower. There was something awful about the
last words.

“He has seen me, constantly, and I have not known it. — A look, taken by stealth, every day, helps him to live. —
Louisa, you do not know! — He is dying. — He wants to say good-bye to me. He knows that my husband has gone away for
several days. He will be here in a moment. Oh! I shall die: I am lost. — Listen, Louisa, stay with me! — I am
afraid!”

“But my husband knows that I have been dining with you; he is sure to come for me,” said Mme. de Wimphen.

“Well, then, before you go I will send him away. I will play the executioner for us both. Oh me! he will
think that I do not love him any more — And that letter of his! Dear, I can see those words in letters of fire.”

A carriage rolled in under the archway.

“Ah!” cried the Marquise, with something like joy in her voice, “he is coming openly. He makes no mystery of
it.”

“Lord Grenville,” announced the servant.

The Marquise stood up rigid and motionless; but at the sight of Arthur’s white face, so thin and haggard, how was it
possible to keep up the show of severity? Lord Grenville saw that Julie was not alone, but he controlled his fierce
annoyance, and looked cool and unperturbed. Yet for the two women who knew his secret, his face, his tones, the look in
his eyes had something of the power attributed to the torpedo. Their faculties were benumbed by the sharp shock of
contact with his horrible pain. The sound of his voice set Julie’s heart beating so cruelly that she could not trust
herself to speak; she was afraid that he would see the full extent of his power over her. Lord Grenville did not dare
to look at Julie, and Mme. de Wimphen was left to sustain a conversation to which no one listened. Julie glanced at her
friend with touching gratefulness in her eyes to thank her for coming to her aid.

By this time the lovers had quelled emotion into silence, and could preserve the limits laid down by duty and
convention. But M. de Wimphen was announced, and as he came in the two friends exchanged glances. Both felt the
difficulties of this fresh complication. It was impossible to enter into explanations with M. de Wimphen, and Louisa
could not think of any sufficient pretext for asking to be left.

Julie went to her, ostensibly to wrap her up in her shawl. “I will be brave,” she said, in a low voice. “He came
here in the face of all the world, so what have I to fear? Yet but for you, in that first moment, when I saw how
changed he looked, I should have fallen at his feet.”

“Well, Arthur, you have broken your promise to me,” she said, in a faltering voice, when she returned. Lord
Grenville did not venture to take the seat upon the sofa by her side.

“I could not resist the pleasure of hearing your voice, of being near you. The thought of it came to be a sort of
madness, a delirious frenzy. I am no longer master of myself. I have taken myself to task; it is no use, I am too weak,
I ought to die. But to die without seeing you, without having heard the rustle of your dress, or felt your tears. What
a death!”

He moved further away from her; but in his hasty uprising a pistol fell out of his pocket. The Marquise looked down
blankly at the weapon; all passion, all expression had died out of her eyes. Lord Grenville stooped for the thing,
raging inwardly over an accident which seemed like a piece of lovesick strategy.

“No, no,” he cried in a choking voice. “Reassure yourself,” he continued, “I have quite given up my deadly purpose.
As soon as I came in, as soon as I saw you, I felt that I was strong enough to suffer in silence, and to die
alone.”

Julie sprang up, and flung herself into his arms. Through her sobbing he caught a few passionate words, “To know
happiness, and then to die. — Yes, let it be so.”

All Julie’s story was summed up in that cry from the depths; it was the summons of nature and of love at which women
without a religion surrender. With the fierce energy of unhoped-for joy, Arthur caught her up and carried her to the
sofa; but in a moment she tore herself from her lover’s arms, looked at him with a fixed despairing gaze, took his
hand, snatched up a candle, and drew him into her room. When they stood by the cot where Helene lay sleeping, she put
the curtains softly aside, shading the candle with her hand, lest the light should dazzle the half-closed eyes beneath
the transparent lids. Helene lay smiling in her sleep, with her arms outstretched on the coverlet. Julie glanced from
her child to Arthur’s face. That look told him all.

“We may leave a husband, even though he loves us: a man is strong; he has consolations. — We may defy the world and
its laws. But a motherless child!”— all these thoughts, and a thousand others more moving still, found language in that
glance.

“Mamma!” At the sweet childish name, so many nobler feelings, so many irresistible yearnings awoke, that for a
moment love was effaced by the all-powerful instinct of motherhood; the mother triumphed over the woman in Julie, and
Lord Grenville could not hold out, he was defeated by Julie’s tears.

Just at that moment a door was flung noisily open. “Madame d’Aiglemont, are you hereabouts?” called a voice which
rang like a crack of thunder through the hearts of the two lovers. The Marquis had come home.

Before Julie could recover her presence of mind, her husband was on the way to the door of her room which opened
into his. Luckily, at a sign, Lord Grenville escaped into the dressing-closet, and she hastily shut the door upon
him.

“Well, my lady, here am I,” said Victor, “the hunting party did not come off. I am just going to bed.”

“Good-night, so am I. So go and leave me to undress.”

“You are very cross to-night, Madame la Marquise.”

The General returned to his room, Julie went with him to the door and shut it. Then she sprang to the dressing-close
to release Arthur. All her presence of mind returned; she bethought herself that it was quite natural that her sometime
doctor should pay her a visit; she might have left him in the drawing-room while she put her little girl to bed. She
was about to tell him, under her breath, to go back to the drawing-room, and had opened the door. Then she shrieked
aloud. Lord Grenville’s fingers had been caught and crushed in the door.

“Well, what is it?” demanded her husband.

“Oh! nothing, I have just pricked my finger with a pin.”

The General’s door opened at once. Julie imagined that the irruption was due to a sudden concern for her, and cursed
a solicitude in which love had no part. She had barely time to close the dressing-closet, and Lord Grenville had not
extricated his hand. The General did, in fact, appear, but his wife had mistaken his motives; his apprehensions were
entirely on his own account.

“Can you lend me a bandana handkerchief? The stupid fool Charles leaves me without a single one. In the early days
you used to bother me with looking after me so carefully. Ah, well, the honeymoon did not last very long for me, nor
yet for my cravats. Nowadays I am given over to the secular arm, in the shape of servants who do not care one jack
straw for what I say.”

“There! There is a bandana for you. Did you go into the drawing-room?”

“No.”

“Oh! you might perhaps have been in time to see Lord Grenville.”

“Is he in Paris?”

“It seems so.”

“Oh! I will go at once. The good doctor.”

“But he will have gone by now!” exclaimed Julie.

The Marquis, standing in the middle of the room, was tying the handkerchief over his head. He looked complacently at
himself in the glass.

“What has become of the servants is more than I know,” he remarked. “I have rung the bell for Charles, and he has
not answered it. And your maid is not here either. Ring for her. I should like another blanket on my bed to-night.”

“Pauline is out,” the Marquise said drily.

“What, at midnight!” exclaimed the General.

“I gave her leave to go to the Opera.”

“That is funny!” returned her husband, continuing to undress. “I thought I saw her coming upstairs.”

“She has come in then, of course,” said Julie, with assumed impatience, and to allay any possible suspicion on her
husband’s part she pretended to ring the bell.

The whole history of that night has never been known, but no doubt it was as simple and as tragically commonplace as
the domestic incidents that preceded it.

Next day the Marquise d’Aiglemont took to her bed, nor did she leave it for some days.

“What can have happened in your family so extraordinary that every one is talking about your wife?” asked M. de
Ronquerolles of M. d’Aiglemont a short time after that night of catastrophes.

“Take my advice and remain a bachelor,” said d’Aiglemont. “The curtains of Helene’s cot caught fire, and gave my
wife such a shock that it will be a twelvemonth before she gets over it; so the doctor says. You marry a pretty wife,
and her looks fall off; you marry a girl in blooming health, and she turns into an invalid. You think she has a
passionate temperament, and find her cold, or else under her apparent coldness there lurks a nature so passionate that
she is the death of you, or she dishonors your name. Sometimes the meekest of them will turn out crotchety, though the
crotchety ones never grow any sweeter. Sometimes the mere child, so simple and silly at first, will develop an iron
will to thwart you and the ingenuity of a fiend. I am tired of marriage.”

“Or of your wife?”

“That would be difficult. By-the-by, do you feel inclined to go to Saint–Thomas d’Aquin with me to attend Lord
Grenville’s funeral?”

“A singular way of spending time. — Is it really known how he came by his death?” added Ronquerolles.

“His man says that he spent a whole night sitting on somebody’s window sill to save some woman’s character, and it
has been infernally cold lately.”

“Such devotion would be highly creditable to one of us old stagers; but Lord Grenville was a youngster and — an
Englishman. Englishmen never can do anything like anybody else.”

“Pooh!” returned d’Aiglemont, “these heroic exploits all depend upon the woman in the case, and it certainly was not
for one that I know, that poor Arthur came by his death.”